Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Internet censorship limits could be set by WTO - Security- msnbc.com

Internet censorship limits could be set by WTO - Security- msnbc.com: "Censorship of the Internet is open to challenge at the World Trade Organization as it can restrict trade in services delivered online, a forthcoming study says."

Friday, October 30, 2009

Security center opens to battle computer attacks - Security- msnbc.com

Security center opens to battle computer attacks - Security- msnbc.com: "The United States is well behind the curve in the fight against computer criminals, Sen. Joe Lieberman said Friday, as Homeland Security officials opened a $9 million operations center to better coordinate the government's response to cyberattacks."

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Get ready for non-Latin letter domain names - Tech and gadgets- msnbc.com

Get ready for non-Latin letter domain names - Tech and gadgets- msnbc.com: "The Internet is set to undergo one of the biggest changes in its four-decade history with the expected approval this week of international domain names — or addresses — that can be written in non-Latin script, an official said Monday."

Monday, October 26, 2009

Are retailers going too far tracking our Web habits? - USATODAY.com

Are retailers going too far tracking our Web habits? - USATODAY.com: "Companies have been monitoring our online behavior for almost as long as there's been an Internet, often using our online footsteps (cookies) whenever we search, browse or buy online. Tracking technology has advanced so much that everything from how long we linger over a product description to whether we are searching for sexual-dysfunction drugs can be collected and stored on individual profiles. Our profiles are numeric descriptions, not our real names, but in some cases, it's not hard to determine personal information behind the numbers."

Will Web 2.0 over take email?

Is e-mail going by the wayside?

Rob Preston at InformationWeek says no. And he makes a good argument.

Preston was responding to a WSJ article analyzing why e-mail's reign has ended. The story, by Jessica E. Vascellaro, pointed to the rise of social media tools that increase speed and collaboration. Preston counters that while tools like Twitter, Facebook and others offer gains over traditional e-mail, they're still impersonal and limited in functionality.

Harvard professor Andy McAfee has been talking about Web 2.0 tools for a few years, since he coined the phrase "Enterprise 2.0" in a Sloan Management Review article (subscription required to read full article).

He spoke with me last week--ahead of the release of his long-awaited book, Enterprise 2.0--and brought up another reason why e-mail is lacking.

McAfee told me about a conversation he had with a CIO from an investment bank. The CIO said Web 2.0 technologies were, in fact, a great defense.

"He said all these Web 2.0 technologies were his best defense, because all the contributions to them are very widely visible, essentially public, and attributed back to the people that made them. That means that the instant there's any flavor of infraction, the community will help him figure out what happened, how bad it is, who did it, and then he can show any regulator or authority when the problem occurred, when his company became aware of it, what action it took and how quickly it was removed."

As McAfee notes, businesses typically don't get in trouble for isolated incidents, but instead for extended periods or patterns of misbehavior. And e-mail, he says, can be a catalyst for that misbehavior.

"These technologies and platforms are great for making sure incidents don't turn into patterns, whereas e-mail--which is a fantastic technology because it happens via private channels--is a great technology for allowing abuses to continue and flourish for a long time."

We'll have more from McAfee in the November issue of CIO Insight, and I'll post more here before then.

In the meantime, two things. First, can you see a time where Web 2.0/collaborative tools will actually replace e-mail at your company? What will it take for that to happen?

And check out this package from award-winning writer Deb Gage on why traditional software might be on the way out. In it, Sunoco CIO Peter Whatnell explains his thinking in evaluating a move to Web-based e-mail at his company.

source: http://blogs.cioinsight.com/biztech30/content/web_20/post_2.html

Social Networking Without Tears - Careers

Social Networking Without Tears - Careers: "A recent survey conducted by Robert Half Technology found that many businesses ban sites such as Facebook and Twitter in the workplace. Seen as a distraction by some, these sites do have potential value to IT employees who use them appropriately."

More CIOs Block Social Networks - Slideshows

More CIOs Block Social Networks - Slideshows: "Do social networking sites serve as useful tools for connecting within the business world, or are they simply time-wasters? More than half of enterprise IT leaders lean toward the latter perspective, according to a new survey conducted amongst 1,400 CIOs by the employment experts at Robert Half Technology."