Master Data Management Critical to Effective Information Governance: Gartner | eWeek.com (Nathan Eddy)

The MDM market continues to grow because it focuses on specific business drivers and business-led initiatives.

Master data management (MDM) is critical to achieving effective information governance, according to a report from IT research firm Gartner, which noted failure to manage information accurately has been the root cause of several incidents, including the leak of sensitive information to WikiLeaks, and can be fatal to the success of MDM programs. Gartner estimates worldwide MDM software revenue will reach $1.9 billion in 2012, a 21 percent increase from 2011.

MDM is a technology-enabled business discipline in which businesses and IT organizations work together to ensure the uniformity, accuracy, stewardship, semantic consistency and accountability of the organization’s official, shared master data assets. It is increasingly identified by organizations with the launch of a formal enterprise information management (EIM) strategy and the foundation of an information governance program that supports EIM.

“The recent global financial crisis has put information governance in the spotlight,” said Ted Friedman, vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner. “Information governance is a priority of IT and business leaders as a result of various pressures, including regulatory compliance mandates and the urgent need for improved decision-making.”

MDM is one of the most notable information governance programs, and the MDM market continues to grow because it focuses on specific business drivers and business-led initiatives. Gartner predicts by 2016, 20 percent of CIOs in regulated industries will lose their jobs for failing to implement the discipline of information governance successfully.

via Master Data Management Critical to Effective Information Governance: Gartner – IT Management – News & Reviews – eWeek.com.

Google’s Opt-in Facial Recognition Avoids Facebook’s Missteps – Security – News & Reviews – eWeek.com

Google+ Find My Face is an opt-in service that uses facial recognition for photo tagging. Facebook launched its service as opt-out, which is why Google is trying to score points with privacy aficionados.

Google’s (NASDAQ:GOOG) quiet introduction of facial recognition for its photos application on Google+ is drawing praise from analysts and security researchers alike because it stands in stark contrast to the way Facebook employed similar technology earlier this year.

That is, it’s opt-in. Google’s Find My Face feature lets its Google+ social network users opt-in to photo tagging. When users opt-in to Find My Face, the next time one of their Google+ contacts adds a photo they’re in, they’ll see their name as a suggested tag. Users will receive a tag prompt can accept or reject any instance where someone wants to tag them.

“Despite the fact that I am not comfortable with my information being gathered in this manner, providing people with a choice is never a bad thing,” wrote Chester Wisniewski, a senior security advisor at security software provider Sophos Canada. “It is up to every individual to make an *informed* choice about how their personal information is shared and asking their permission is the right approach.”

via Google’s Opt-in Facial Recognition Avoids Facebook’s Missteps – Security – News & Reviews – eWeek.com.

Google Adds Apture For In-Page Search in Chrome – Application Development – News & Reviews – eWeek.com

Google acquired Apture to provide contextually relevant search technology within Web pages served by the Chrome Web browser.

Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) Nov. 10 confirmed it acquired in-page search specialist Apture for an undisclosed sum, a move to bolster the company’s search experience in its Chrome Web browser.

Apture makes software called Highlights that publishers such as Hearst, the Reader’s Digest and Financial Times embed in their Websites to let readers search within Web pages.

Readers highlight words in an article on a Web page supported by Apture to see a small, overlay browser window that provides links to contextually relevant text, videos, photos and more information about the highlighted topic.

Apture content is a vector for Google. While Apture sources for text include links to TechCrunch, Flickr, Twitter, and Wikipedia, they are delivered by Google’s search engine. Moreover, the video options point users to Google’s YouTube property and the pictures are gleaned from Google’s Image Search product.

Apture also makes a Highlights browser extension so that users visiting Websites in Chrome Mozilla Firefox, or Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) Safari browsers.

via Google Adds Apture For In-Page Search in Chrome – Application Development – News & Reviews – eWeek.com.

Proposed Facebook Privacy Complaint Settlement Under FTC Review – eWeek.com

The Federal Trade Commission has proposed a settlement with Facebook over claims that the site violated user privacy when it changed default privacy settings without warning.

Under a proposed 20-year settlement, Facebook would be required to obtain express consent from users before sharing material that was posted under earlier terms, The Wall Street Journal reported.

The United States Federal Trade Commission has proposed a 20-year settlement with Facebook over charges that the social networking giant changed default user settings that resulted in more information being disclosed than was previously public, a source told The Wall Street Journal on Nov. 10. The source declined to be identified because the settlement hasn’t been finalized.

The proposed settlement would require Facebook to get consent to share the pieces of data if it is different from how the user originally agreed the data could be used, when it was initially posted. The settlement would not cover new features or how consent is obtained for those features. It’s not clear whether there will be any monetary damages.

According to the WSJ report, if the settlement is approved, Facebook would also be subject to an annual, independent review of the site’s privacy practices. FTC and Facebook did not comment.

The FTC began investigating Facebook after the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a Washington-based advocacy group, filed a complaint Dec. 17, 2009. The complaint alleged consumers were harmed when Facebook changed its default privacy settings and requested that the site be required to give users “meaningful control over personal information.” Nine other consumer advocacy groups, including the American Library Association, Consumer Federation of America and The Privacy Rights Clearinghouse, signed the complaint.

via Proposed Facebook Privacy Complaint Settlement Under FTC Review – Security – News & Reviews – eWeek.com.

HP Planning ARM-Based Servers With Calxeda, Challenging Intel: eWeek.com

HP reportedly will become the first major server maker to use ARM-based processors in some of its data center servers.

Hewlett-Packard reportedly will partner with chip-maker Calxeda to develop data center servers powered by low-power processors designed by ARM Holdings.

Quoting unnamed people close to the situation, Bloomberg and the Wall Street Journal are reporting that HP will become the first major OEM to adopt ARM-based processors for some of its servers, a move that would heighten the growing competition between ARM and Intel, the world’s top chip maker.

Intel, which holds more than 80 percent of the overall global chip market and 90 percent of the $9 billion worldwide server chip space, has been aggressive in trying to break into the mobile device space, particularly smartphones and tablets, the bulk of which currently are powered by ARM chips manufactured by the likes of Texas Instruments, Samsung, Qualcomm and Nvidia.

At the same time, ARM executives have been vocal about their plans to move up the ladder and into PCs and low-power servers, and a number of manufacturers—including Calxeda, Marvell Technologies and Nvidia—are developing chips for the data center. Calxeda has a product-based event scheduled for Nov. 1, though the company has not yet said what the event will be about.

via HP Planning ARM-Based Servers With Calxeda, Challenging Intel: Reports – IT Infrastructure – News & Reviews – eWeek.com.

Google’s Expanded Privacy Tools Span Search, Ads, Chrome, YouTube, Gmail – Security – News & Reviews – eWeek.com

Google takes a lot of heat over user privacy, much of it well deserved after exposing privacy for Google Buzz users early on and snorting users email, computer passwords and browser data from 2007 to 2010 from users’ WiFi networks. Few people who aren’t diehard Google Watchers know this, but the company has actually baked a lot of user privacy tools into its various software products. That includes protections for users of its search, Gmail, Chrome Web browser, Google Maps, YouTube, among other services. Even Google’s often maligned advertising products, the services that make 97 percent of the company’s money, have tools to shore up user data privacy. Take a look at eWEEK’s quick tour of Google’s privacy tools.

via Google’s Expanded Privacy Tools Span Search, Ads, Chrome, YouTube, Gmail – Security – News & Reviews – eWeek.com.

Anonymous Claims Network Breach of FBI Security Contractor ManTech – Security – News & Reviews – eWeek.com

As promised, Anonymous has sought to embarrass the FBI with a network attack, this time going after defense contractor ManTech International.

“Hacktivist” collective Anonymous claims to have “owned” the defense contractor ManTech International and promised to release the stolen information within 24 hours, according to a post on Twitter that appeared shortly after midnight on July 29.

Some documents have already been posted as “teasers,” including a resume of an individual with significant military and law enforcement background and a statement of work memo for NATO Communication & Information Systems Services Agency. About 500MB of files are expected to be released.

This latest attack is in apparent retribution for the July 20 arrests of individuals who are accused of participating in Anonymous group hacking attacks.

Earlier this week, in the midst of news reports about British police arresting a suspected member of hacker group LulzSec and regular updates on Twitter about people canceling PayPal accounts in protest, Anonymous posted the following warning on Twitter, “Also, tomorrow: Expect something nice. Looks like the FBI asked for a slap in the face. Well, we can deliver. #FFF (On Thursday, who cares).”

via Anonymous Claims Network Breach of FBI Security Contractor ManTech – Security – News & Reviews – eWeek.com.

Microsoft Could Benefit From Google Antitrust Probe: Analysts – Desktops and Notebooks – News & Reviews – eWeek.com

Microsoft’s Bing search engine could benefit from a federal probe into Google’s business practices, according to analysts.

According to The Wall Street Journal, the FTC will soon subpoena Google for information, which in turn could lead into an antitrust inquiry into the search engine giant’s search advertising practices. The FTC will also apparently send formal requests for information to companies that work with Google. (Neither Google nor the FTC provided comment to eWEEK on the matter.)

U.S. Sens. Herb Kohl, D-Wisc., and Mike Lee, R-Utah, also want Google CEO Larry Page and Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt to appear at their July hearing on the search industry. Google plans to send Chief Legal Officer David Drummond, who has testified before about Google’s acquisitions and policies. But the two senators, in a June 10 letter, remained insistent that either Page or Schmidt appear to answer “fundamental questions about business operations rather than merely legal matters.”

That congressional drama is dovetailing neatly with the FTC’s recent focus on Google’s business practices, although The Wall Street Journal noted that any formal FTC investigation could take more than a year to unfold and result in no formal charges.

According to research firm comScore, Google held 65.5 percent of the search market through May, compared with Yahoo at 15.9 percent and Bing at 14.1 percent. Google continues to lure more than 1 billion unique visitors a month to its properties, versus Microsoft with 905 million.

But Microsoft has been notably aggressive of late in building out Bing’s capabilities. Bing now presents Facebook information on the search-results page. Search for a particular city, for example, and the search engine will tell you which Facebook friends live there. Given Microsoft’s minority stake in Facebook, this leveraging of the latter’s data should come as no surprise; for its own part, Microsoft seems determined to graft a social layer into search as a means of differentiating its own offering from its Mountain View, Calif., rival.

New features and slow-but-steady market share gains aside, a federal probe into Google’s practices could also help Bing gain share.

“Direct injunctions could prevent Google from doing certain things,” Roger Kay, an analyst with Endpoint Technologies Associates, told eWEEK June 24. Federal action could also spark “excessive caution on the part of Google trying to avoid getting near the tripwire, once the Department of Justice or whoever sets up such a thing.”

via Microsoft Could Benefit From Google Antitrust Probe: Analysts – Desktops and Notebooks – News & Reviews – eWeek.com.

Google Apps Phases Out Older IE, Firefox, Safari Versions – Messaging and Collaboration – News & Reviews – eWeek.com

Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) said it will phase out support for older versions of Microsoft Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox and Apple Safari August 1 in its Google Apps collaboration software.

The search engine has been putting most of its wood behind HTML5, upgrading its own applications to support the fresher Web markup language. Google’s own Chrome Web browser and Chrome Operating System were built from the beginning to handle HTML5.

Google is banking on Chrome and HTML5 to make Web applications the rule rather than the exception to legacy on-premise software created by Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) and others. Chrome OS notebooks from Samsung and Acer are launching in two weeks to introduce the commercial consumer market to Google’s cloud computing experience, which hinges on Web apps.

via Google Apps Phases Out Older IE, Firefox, Safari Versions – Messaging and Collaboration – News & Reviews – eWeek.com.

Symantec to Send Backup Exec to the Cloud – Data Storage – News & Reviews – eWeek.com

Symantec’s Backup Exec.cloud is aimed at small businesses or remote offices that want to wash their hands of IT infrastructure.

In yet another move of a standard, server-based application to an offsite alternative, Symantec revealed May 3 that its venerable and market-leading BackUp Exec will be adding a cloud-based option later this year.

The company made the announcement–one of several, in fact–at its annual Symantec Vision conference in Las Vegas.

Symantec’s Backup Exec.cloud, aimed at small businesses or remote offices that want to wash their hands of IT infrastructure, will be a hosted, automated backup service that protects files on Windows desktops and servers with a straightforward user interface for online backup and recovery.

Thus, it will soon compete directly with such marketshare-grabbing services as EMC Mozy, Seagate’s i365, CommVault, Acronis, Amazon S3 and others for the SMB cloud storage business.

via Symantec to Send Backup Exec to the Cloud – Data Storage – News & Reviews – eWeek.com.