Vendors must learn that juxtaposing one’s own products with EMC’s as a means for advancing one’s own value proposition is silly.
Can information security professionals really get certified in half the ordinary time?
The dot-com boom’s legacy: buggy code. How do you find those bugs? Instead of trying to do code reviews with tools that were meant for developers, it's time to do them with tools meant for security
Yankee Group predicts large growth in the authentication market. Here are three things every organization needs to do to ensure users are who they say they are.
A new iSeries offering provides mainframe-like features—advanced backup, replication, and high-availability clustering—across IBM's eServer product line.
The secret: an integrated business design
Spectra Logic proves it offers products and pragmatism; Python will raise the bar for other vendors.
Handheld security expert suggests best practices for organizations that support the devices
Central Command shows a single virus accounted for over three-quarters of all activity last month.
Vulnerability in Microsoft applications occurs thanks to Visual Basic for Applications
To allay PeopleSoft users' fears, company tries to show it can do right by an acquisition.
Web-based solution simplifies connecting users to legacy applications for insurer
It's not about how much IT spends. World-class companies know how to spend their IT budget wisely.
Imation Corporation survey shows IT infrastructure poorly safeguarded, despite recent natural and man-made events
To avoid the patch-and-pray cycle, IT organizations need to examine how to make vulnerabilities such as Sobig seem so small.
Cisco details vulnerabilities in CiscoWorks; eMule code hiding in P2P software
Techniques for challenging and defeating spam filters continue to grow
SmartDBA database management tool gets bi-directional data synchronization and replication capabilities.
Advocates say Oracle's bid is an attempt to acquire the customer base or destroy the company, but were excerpts taken out of context?
Just nine percent of CIOs say they plan to hire new IT professionals next quarter, while four percent expect further cuts.