El siguiente paso de Wikileaks: Crowdsourcing datos clasificados – Computer World

The release on Sunday by Wikileaks of more than 90,000 documents about military operations in Afghanistan may just be the start of problems for the U.S. gobierno.

The online publication of the documents, which offer an insideand potentially embarrassinglook at the war in Afghanistan between 2004 and the end of 2009, represent a failure by the U.S. to control its classified data from insider threat. And it throws open to the whole world a chance to crowdsource the information the documents contain.

Con esto en mente, Wikileaks’ Editor-In-Chief Julian Assange on Monday urged intrepid researchers to cull the documents for information that the groupand three publications given access to themhave yet to uncover. Assange said that Excel, one of the formats in which the material was released, might be the best way to sort through it.

During a news conference that was webcast, he even guided would-be researchers, saying they could use a search term such aschildrento parse the data for casualty reports.

When mining the documents for information, it’s important search for somethingquite broad…,” dijo. “Don’t tell th

a través de El siguiente paso de Wikileaks: Crowdsourcing datos clasificados – Computer World.

Europa inicia consultas antimonopolio contra I.B.M. – NYTimes.com

The European Commission opened investigations Monday into whether I.B.M. had abused its dominant position in mainframe computers, signaling that the era of aggressive prosecution of American technology leaders in Europe did not end with the Microsoft antitrust case.

The commission said that it would examine whether I.B.M. had shut out rival mainframe software vendors and service providers. The investigation could lead to charges and potential fines against the company.

Joaquín Almunia, who took over in February as the European competition commissioner, “is making it clear that the Internet and the information technology sector will be an enforcement priority for him and for the commission,” said Alec Burnside, a competition lawyer in Brussels at the law firm, Linklaters. “It is clear that he is building on the precedent left him by his predecessor.”

a través de Europa inicia consultas antimonopolio contra I.B.M. – NYTimes.com.

Law.com – Privileged Information in aWikiLeaks’ Mundo

The disclosure of 92,000 classified military documents about the war in Afghanistan by WikiLeaks followed by related stories in The New York Times, The Guardian and Der Spiegel surely didn’t happen without the benefit of legal counsel advising on the potential First Amendment and national security issues arising from their publication.

A note to readers published by The Times on its website highlights just how sensitiveand potentially dangerousmuch of the information is. The Times states that it cross-checked data, chose not to publish information that would harm national security interests, redacted the names of diplomats, field operatives and military commanders, and avoided reporting on anything that could jeopardize U.S. and allied intelligence-gathering methods. (The Timesreports were independent of what WikiLeaks itself published on a special site set up for the disclosures, and what was published by The Guardian and Der Spiegel.)

a través de Law.com – Privileged Information in aWikiLeaks’ Mundo.

Vs subcontratados. En Casa de e-Discovery: Hacer la elección correcta

A law firm’s size, its finances, and the number and technical prowess of a corporate legal department’s in-house staff are among the most important considerations when choosing to outsource e-Discovery or bring this mission-critical process in-house. Decision makers must also closely assess the complexity orall-in-onenessof e-Discovery software solutions and their infrastructure requirements before finalizing their decision.

The ability to manage E-Discovery is an essential business process staple at law firms and within legal departments. Access to electronic evidence, whether email messages, documentos, text files, images, bases de datos, hojas de cálculo, or audio files, increases efficiencies and bolsters ROI by saving immeasurable time in performing litigation and computer forensics. Making the wrong choice between outsourcing or bringing e-Discovery in-house can wreak havoc on a firm’s bottom line and its operational and procedural efficiencies.

a través de Vs subcontratados. En Casa de e-Discovery: Hacer la elección correcta.

Podcast: Cuestiones actuales de la informática forense | Red Discusión jurídica

Knowledge of eDiscovery is vital to today’s legal profession. On this edition of Digital Detectives, co-anfitriones Sharon D. Nelson, Esq., El presidente de las Empresas Sensei, Inc. y John W. Simek, El vicepresidente de Empresas Sensei, welcome computer forensics technologist, Craig D. Ball, to talk about how some courts view computer forensics analysis as simply searching on a list of terms, avoiding waste in eDiscovery and the challenges of effective keyword searching.

a través de Cuestiones actuales de la informática forense | Red Discusión jurídica.

Podcast: Solicitud de idea de ofrecer la Escuela de Derecho de E-Discovery Clínicas de despachos pequeños||ESIBytes

Escuchar a Karl Schieneman, Director de Análisis y Revisión de JurInnov, hablar sobre una idea que está trabajando con otros en el campo para una sin fines de lucro para estudiantes de derecho de la red como una clínica de E-Discovery para ayudar en la educación de las pequeñas empresas de la ley de descubrimiento electrónico. Este podcast es en realidad una breve descripción de una idea y una solicitud para ponerse en contacto conmigo si te gusta la idea y quieren ayudar, es un estudiante de derecho y puede proporcionar alguna información sobre la idea, saben una escuela de derecho que enseña el descubrimiento electrónico o, mejor aún, sabe un profesor que enseña descubrimiento electrónico.

a través de Solicitud de idea de ofrecer la Escuela de Derecho de E-Discovery Clínicas de despachos pequeños||ESIBytes.

El cumplimiento de la Semana: Tendencias en el primer semestre de Sanciones Electronic Discovery

Ha sido un año muy ocupado ya en el mundo de descubrimiento electrónico. Entre otras cosas, la primera mitad del 2010 traído una serie de nuevas decisiones relativas a las sanciones e-discovery.

Hasta el momento, litigantes buscan sanciones en menos casos que en 2009, pero las sanciones se han otorgado casi en la misma, de acuerdo con una actualización de mitad de año en e-discovery evolución y las tendencias de Gibson Dunn & Crutcher.

De 103 e-discovery opiniones emitidas a partir de enero. 1 – Junio 17 que fueron analizadas por el GDC, litigantes buscaron las sanciones en 30 percent, o 31 casos en comparación con, compared to 42 percent in all of 2009. Ellos recibieron sanciones 68 percent (21) de los casos, compared to 70 percent in all of 2009.

Los costos y gastos asociados con la disputa descubrimiento en sí eran las sanciones más frecuentes otorgado, impuestas en 14 de los 21 casos en que los tribunales imponen algún tipo de sanción. Instrucciones de inferencia adversa se impusieron en 4 casos en comparación con, mientras que otras sanciones pecuniarias impuestas en tres casos.

a través de El cumplimiento de la Semana: El archivador – »Tendencias en la primera mitad Sanciones Electronic Discovery.

Enterprise Search and Pursuit of the Google Experience

Search is an incredibly interesting problem, one that’s so complex in the background yet so simple on the surface. In this two part article, we examine the desire to duplicate the Google search experience in the enterprise and how we need to change what we expect from enterprise search based on what we’re willing to do to make it work.

What could be easier than entering a few keywords into a single text box and, in a fraction of a second, being granted access to tens or even hundreds of millions of relevant resources — all the information we could ever really want right at the tips of our fingers. For most, this is perceived as a near perfect user experience that is today’s reality when we search online using Google.

Yet a common complaint heard internally across many organizations is the inability to easily find the right answer amongst a set of far fewer, and often less relevant results. The organization of content into intuitive information architectures is a challenging problem, and the creation of navigational constructs that classify information into meaningful categories is becoming increasingly difficult due to the sheer volume of content being produced.

The user experience is increasingly becoming both complicated and fragmented and is placing a greater emphasis on search as the silver bullet. Desafortunadamente, search too is failing to meet the needs of our users and is oftentimes perceived as nothing more than “a random document generator”, as one client has colorfully put it.

a través de Enterprise Search and Pursuit of the Google Experience.

Motorola Android 3.0 comprimido puede estar aquí este año | TG Daily

Android lover Motorola is expected to be working on an iPad competitor that runs on Google’s mobile operating system, but what’s bigger news is that it could be one of the first devices to run the next-generation Android 3.0.

Analysts Roger Crenshaw and Ashok Kumar predict that Motorola could bring the tablet to the US by the end of this year, and say it’s likely to use the so-called “Pan de jengibre” version of Android, which no other device currently does.

a través de Motorola Android 3.0 comprimido puede estar aquí este año | TG Daily.

Google Apps equipados con controles Gobierno — InformationWeek

Catering to a growing need among cost-constrained government agencies for cloud computing that’s both affordable and secure, Google on Monday introduced a new version of Google Apps for federal, estado, and local government agencies in the U.S.

Google Apps for Government offers the same suite of online applications as Google Apps Premiere Edition, with Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA) certification and support for government-mandated policy and security measures.

Google claims that Google Apps for Government is the first multi-tenant cloud computing suite to receive certification under FISMA, which sets guidelines for responsible information security management in U.S. government information systems.

a través de Google Apps equipados con controles Gobierno — InformationWeek.