Sprint offers the most data bang for the buck | Wireless – CNET News

If you’re a heavy data user, Sprint offers the most bang for your buck, according to a study released today.

For $1, you get 12.5 megabytes of data, which breaks down to 8 cents per megabyte, by far the best among the national carriers. Surprisingly, T-Mobile offers the worst deal at 4.3 megabytes for every dollar spent, or 23 cents per megabyte.

That’s based on a study of “real world” prices conducted by Validas, which provides automated wireless bill analysis and reduction services to consumers and companies.

(Credit: Validas)

AT&T, meanwhile, came in second at 5.6 megabytes for every $1 spent, or 18 cents per megabyte, while Verizon Wireless offered 5 megabytes per data, or 20 cents per megabyte.

The study looked at how much, on average, a customer spent on a smartphone data plan and looked at how much data was consumed at each carrier. Sprint got the best stats because more of its customers are on a higher-speed 4G network: a faster connection means more data consumed. The carrier also offers attractive data rates and a completely unlimited plan, which has liked drawn in heavy users.

via Sprint offers the most data bang for the buck | Wireless – CNET News.

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IT Department Takes on Critical Ediscovery Role – EnterpriseStorageForum.com

After years of minimal involvement in ediscovery, IT is increasingly responsible for the critical data management and collections phases of ediscovery. This article follows up on our previous discussion of ediscovery, “Sea Changes for IT and Ediscovery” Here, we will look at the three driving factors in this change, as well as the place email archives and backup now occupy in meeting new ediscovery responsibilities.

Three Driving Factors for Fast-Growing Data

Fast data growth is a fact of life in private and public sectors. Storage administrators work to manage storage across complex infrastructure, including primary storage, nearline/archival storage, disk-based protection tiers, tape libraries, off-site mirrored storage systems, and individual desktops and laptops.

This is challenging enough simply for managing backup and archive, and ediscovery adds a whole different twist. The bad news as far as ediscovery goes is that 1) these fast-growing data stores house data must be discovered for litigation and compliance, 2) IT must control this data for retention as well as for cost-effective storage management, and 3) each storage type may have dozens or hundreds of storage targets and components, making each sub-environment a discovery challenge all by itself.

IT has been understandably reluctant to take on the ediscovery process in these complex storage environments, but there is no avoiding it anymore. The risk of poor ediscovery is too high. Attorneys understand collection and preservation in a legal sense, but only IT is positioned to provide search access and preservation in complex storage environments.

via IT Department Takes on Critical Ediscovery Role – EnterpriseStorageForum.com.

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Sony insurer sues to deny data breach coverage | Reuters

One of Sony Corp’s insurers has asked a court to declare that it does not have to pay to defend the media and electronics conglomerate from mounting legal claims related to a massive data breach earlier this year.

The dispute comes as demand soars for “cyberinsurance,” with companies seeking to protect themselves against customer claims and associated costs for data and identity theft.

How to write such policies has become a huge subject of debate in the insurance industry.

Zurich American Insurance Co asked a New York state court in documents filed late on Wednesday to rule it does not have to defend or indemnify Sony against any claims “asserted in the class-action lawsuits, miscellaneous claims, or potential future actions instituted by any state attorney general.”

via Sony insurer sues to deny data breach coverage | Reuters.

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Apple releases $49 Thunderbolt cable, offers external RAID systems | AppleInsider

Apple on Tuesday added a new $49 Thunderbolt high-speed data cable to its online store, as well as a handful of external RAID storage options starting at $999.

The new Thunderbolt cable measures 2 meters and supports the next-generation data port found on Apple’s latest iMacs and MacBook Pros. Thunderbolt offers two independent channels of 10Gbit/s each.

The official Apple Thunderbolt cable allows users to connect Thunderbolt peripherals, but it can also be used for Target Disk Mode between two Macs. The cable can also be used to make a Thunderbolt-equipped iMac serve as a display for a new MacBook Pro.

Also available in Apple’s online store are a handful of external RAID systems, all of which ship within 24 hours:

The least expensive option is the Promise Pegasus R4 with 4TB of data. It features four 1TB 7200-rpm drives delivering over 500MB/s of disk performance.

For $1,499, the Pegasus R4 can be doubled to 8TB, operating at the same 500MB/s.

For more speed, Apple offers the Promise Pegasus R6. It includes six 1TB 7200-rpm hard drives that deliver over 800MB/s of disk performance for $1,499.

Finally, the R6 can also have twice the storage with the 12TB offering, priced at $1,999.

via AppleInsider | Apple releases $49 Thunderbolt cable, offers external RAID systems.

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AT&T Vs. Verizon: Which Data Plan Is Better? – mobility Blog

Last September, Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg said that Big Red would move to tiered data plans, in favor of the current all-you-can-eat plans they now offer, within six months. While a few months late, he is holding to his word. The changes are expected to take place on July 7.

Droid Life says that the 2-GB plan will be $30. That is just a bit more than AT&T’s $25 2-GB DataPro plan for the iPhone. T-Mobile is a bit harder to compare to, no doubt by design. It doesn’t offer pure data plans but sells most of its services in an Even More bundle. If you pick it apart, you can estimate T-Mobile’s 2-GB plan is $20 per month. That puts Verizon at the high end of the scale.

Verizon also has a 5-GB plan for $50 and 10 GB for $80. If you want to tether another device to your phone, it will cost you an extra $20 per month, but Verizon will throw in an extra 2 GB. Overages are charged at the rate of $10 per GB. If you need a lot of data, your choice is Verizon. Tethering on a 10-GB plan will cost you $100 per month but give you 12 GB. AT&T’s biggest plan is 4 GB, which includes tethering, for $45. With overage fees, 12 GB on AT&T’s network would cost $125. For reasonable monthly data consumption, AT&T is a bit cheaper, but if you chew through data, Verizon has the better rates.

via AT&T Vs. Verizon: Which Data Plan Is Better? – mobility Blog.

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Facebook Faces EU Privacy Probe Over Facial-Recognition Photo ‘Tagging’ – Bloomberg

Facebook Inc. will be probed by data- protection regulators from the 27-nation European Union over a feature that uses a facial-recognition program to automatically suggest people’s names to tag in pictures.

“Tags of people on pictures should only happen based on people’s prior consent and it can’t be activated by default,” said Gerard Lommel, a Luxembourg member of the so-called Article 29 Data Protection Working Party. Such automatic tagging “can bear a lot of risks for users” and the group will “clarify to Facebook that this can’t happen like this.”

Facebook, owner of the world’s most popular social- networking service, said in a post on its blog yesterday that “Tag Suggestions” are available in most countries now after a rollout that’s been going on over several months. The feature uses facial-recognition software, and when a user posts a new photo to their Facebook page, the feature suggests peoples’ names to be tagged based on pictures they have been tagged in before.

The feature is active by default on existing users’ accounts and Palo Alto, California-based Facebook explains on its blog post how people can disable the function themselves if they don’t want their names to be suggested automatically in other people’s pictures.

via Facebook Faces EU Privacy Probe Over Facial-Recognition Photo ‘Tagging’ – Bloomberg.

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What is Apple’s huge data warehouse for? | ZDNet

Why is Steve Jobs standing in front a huge data warehouse just weeks after patching a big privacy hole in iOS?

Steve Jobs’ morning keynote at Apple’s World Wide Developers Conference included some shots of the new North Carolina data center – including this one:

 

 

Photo courtesy of Macworld

These are Teradata data warehouse systems: massive, high-performance storage systems sold to enable:

. . . the analytical performance you need . . . to intelligently process all types of analytical and business intelligence queries.

Translation: they aren’t storing your music.

How massive?

There are a couple of Teradata products that use this rack. The larger one, the Extreme Data Appliance is expandable to over 4,000 nodes and over 180,000 TB of capacity. In the picture it looks like there are at least 28 racks with a fully configured capacity of over 8,000 TB.

That’s just one row of machines.

Geospatial services

Another feature of the Teradata database:

Geospatial analysis: Built-in geospatial functions and analysis allow geospatial relationships (e.g., distance, within an area or territory) to be used with other business factors and all of the data in the data warehouse.

Very handy for the location aware services that iCloud provides. And valuable for retailers and manufacturers who want deep insight into their customer’s buying habits and geographical spread.

via What is Apple’s huge data warehouse for? | ZDNet.

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Lockheed keeps mum on reported data breach – Computerworld

The nation’s No. 1 defense contractor, Lockheed Martin, today would neither confirm nor deny a Reuters story saying the company had experienced a major data breach.

A Lockheed spokesman, Jeffrey Adams, said today in a brief statement via email that the company did not, as a matter of policy, discuss specific threats or responses. “We have policies and procedures in place to mitigate the cyber threats to our business, and we remain confident in the integrity of our robust, multi-layered information systems security,” the statement noted.

Earlier, a Reuters story quoting unnamed sources within Lockheed had reported that the defense contractor was grappling with a major internal computer network problem that had affected a “lot of people.”

The incident has forced Lockheed to reset passwords for employees and take other unspecified measures. Lockheed has notified the Pentagon about the problem, the report said.

via Lockheed keeps mum on reported data breach – Computerworld.

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Google Brings TRUSTe Certification To Apps Marketplace — InformationWeek

In an effort to make the cloud more transparent, Google has introduced a TRUSTe data privacy certification program for enterprise Web apps in its Apps Marketplace.

The Google Apps Marketplace opened in March 2010 with over 50 installable Web apps and grew to over 300 a year later. It is a business-oriented version of the Chrome Web Store, launched in December 2010.

Google’s goal with the Apps Marketplace has been to simplify the process of Web app discovery, evaluation, and deployment. Businesses that deploy Marketplace apps gain the benefits of Google account single sign-on and access through the universal navigation bar that those with Google accounts see when logged in. Some Marketplace apps also synchronize with Google Apps data.

Such convenience, however, invariably comes with concerns about how these apps handle corporate data. Given the reports of insecure and malicious apps in the Android Market, not to mention ongoing efforts to steal data or dupe users through malicious advertising, it’s understandable that business IT managers have asked Google for reassurance about the data handling and privacy practices of Web app vendors.

Is your IT team taking ownership of the cloud?

Discover 6 major areas to must focus on to avert problems with cloud computing.

To address such concerns, TRUSTe has created a certification program by which makers of installable Web apps can make their data and privacy practices more clear to current and potential customers. Certification is free for the first year and $300 for each year thereafter.

via Google Brings TRUSTe Certification To Apps Marketplace — InformationWeek.

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Analysis: Epsilon hacking shows new spear-phishing risks | Reuters

A data breach involving online marketer Epsilon, whose clients are a Who’s Who of major banks and retailers, was only the latest in a string of hacking attacks aimed at getting email records for more thefts, security experts warned on Monday.

The breach, disclosed in stages since Friday, involved the Epsilon unit of Alliance Data Systems Corp, which said some clients’ customer names and email addresses were obtained via an “unauthorized entry.”

Companies that have said they were exposed since then include banks Citigroup Inc and Capital One Financial Corp, and retailers Walgreen Co and Best Buy Co.

Compromised files apparently did not include the payment card data that has created scares in the past, such as at retailer TJX Cos.

But security experts said just having email addresses — plus knowing where someone shops — can help thieves write more sophisticated emails to steal financial data or spread malicious software, or malware.

That practice — using emails that appear to come from a trustworthy source to steal data — is sometimes known “spear-phishing” because such emails are more focused than traditional “phishing” emails.

via Analysis: Epsilon hacking shows new spear-phishing risks | Reuters.

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