Technolog – Chrome inching up to No. 2 browser

Google’s Chrome Web browser continues to shine; it’s making its way up the list of top desktop browsers, according to Net Applications, which shows Chrome at 16.20 percent, compared to 8.76 percent a year ago around this time.

In contrast, Internet Explorer’s market share continues to decline, from 60.99 percent a year ago to 54.39 percent; and Firefox, which had 23.55 percent last year now has 22.48 percent of the desktop market share. (Msnbc.com is a joint venture of Microsoft and NBC Universal.)

via Technolog – Chrome inching up to No. 2 browser.

U.S. Guidelines Aim to Bolster Software Security – NYTimes.com

The Homeland Security Department unveiled a new system of guidance on Monday intended to help make the software behind Web sites, power grids and other services less susceptible to hacking.

The system includes an updated list of the top 25 programming errors that enable today’s most serious hacks. It adds new tools to help software programmers eliminate the most dangerous types of mistakes and enable organizations to demand and buy more secure products.

The effort to improve software security has been three years in the making, according to Robert A. Martin, principal engineer at Mitre, a technology nonprofit organization that conducts federal research in systems engineering.

The costs of flaws or omissions that make software susceptible to attack was highlighted by a number of recent attacks that resulted in the theft of credit card information, user names and passwords from government and banking sites.

During an online news conference, government officials pointed out that a wide range of stakeholders had an interest in seeing the top 25 errors addressed, and they stressed the need for better training and education for people writing software.

via U.S. Guidelines Aim to Bolster Software Security – NYTimes.com.

Nuxeo CMF v1.7 Speeds Development, Deployment of Case-Based Solutions

New Features, Functionally

But that ignores many of the other improvements, including UI and usability enhancements, better email distribution and capture functionality, as well as features for faceted navigation and content views.

We can’t possibly list all the improvements here (there is extensive documentation on the website), but some of the highlights include:

Content Routing: Enables user-designed flows of content and selection from among a shared library of sequential or simultaneous steps that can be reused

Mailing: Cases can be sent to predefined user lists

Email Capture: New parsers for Gmail and Thunderbird have been added to capture incoming communication and content

Content Views: Offers views and configuration of content listings, including documents, search results and log entries.

Installation: Wizard and Java-based launcher with embedded shell

And the list goes on. We might also add CMIS support that was added when the original version was released, enabling the access and transfer of cases between different systems and the possibility of building multi-repository case management applications. Nuxeo CMF is available with no license charge by downloading it here.

via Nuxeo CMF v1.7 Speeds Development, Deployment of Case-Based Solutions.

Sarkozy enlists tech A-list for Web forum – The China Post

When the Internet world’s titans alight in Paris next week for a two-day forum hosted by French President Nicolas Sarkozy, two often clashing views on the digital world will be on display.

 

One, typically espoused by new companies like Google Inc. or Amazon.com Inc challenging the status quo, favors a hands-off regulatory approach and favorable tax and labor rules to ensure the Internet remains a key growth engine.

The other, more common in Europe, tends to be more concerned about the excesses of the Internet and has been more willing to impose regulation on everything from privacy to copyright issues to protect entrenched interests.

“The future of the Internet is being decided by businesses that are just trying to protect themselves from the potential of the Internet,” says Stanford Professor Lawrence Lessig, a campaigner for less regulation in fields like copyright.

“These tend to be the businesses with the most political influence,” adds Lessig, who will join Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, Google’s Eric Schmidt, News Corp’s Rupert Murdoch and a host of other technology leaders in Paris.

The United States, with its flourishing Internet hub in Silicon Valley, is the envy of many entrepreneurs in Europe who feel hampered by a lack of angel investors, unhelpful regulation in areas like stock options — and a lack of like-minded people.

via Sarkozy enlists tech A-list for Web forum – The China Post.

New App To Fix Android’s Privacy And Data-Security Holes Coming Soon | Fast Company

Android phones have many good qualities, but privacy protection and personal data security aren’t high on the list. Enter a new app that enables privacy mode.

Researchers at North Carolina State University tackled the emerging concerns about user-data privacy protection in Android smartphones. To combat leaking data, prevent apps from sharing data that users would prefer they didn’t, and to prevent data loss if an app is maliciously searching for info, a team under Dr. Xuxian Jiang put together has created a new mode for Android devices that adds in a user-controlled privacy interface.

The system is called Taming Information-Stealing Smartphone Applications (TISSA), and its primary task is to install customizable privacy settings for the level of information that each app can access and/or share. The settings can be tweaked dynamically, and could be adjusted each time you run an app if you so choose. Essentially, it lets you switch between “trusted,” “anonymized,” “bogus,” and “empty”–apps that are trusted are allowed free reign, apps that are anonymized are sent general information but barred from accessing “real” personal data, and “bogus” apps get sent fake data. The highest setting ,”empty,” merely tells apps that request personal data that is does not exist or is unavailable.

via New App To Fix Android’s Privacy And Data-Security Holes Coming Soon | Fast Company.

iPad 2 Tops Consumer Reports Tablet Ratings – NYTimes.com

Consumer Reports has released its rundown of the top 10 tablets, and while it says there’s some competition brewing, Apple still wins in terms of both quality and price. The iPad also has a leg up on competitors that are yet to be released, and Consumer Reports does a good job of pointing to little details that illustrate why that is.

The iPad took four of the top five spots on Consumer Reports’ ratings chart. The 32 GB  iPad 2 with Wi-Fi + 3G topped the list with an overall score of 84, and the 32 GB iPad 2 Wi-Fi took second. Original model 32 GB iPads with 3G and Wi-Fi-only took third and fifth, respectively. The Motorola Xoom was the only non-Apple tablet in the top five, with a fourth-place ranking.

The top five, plus the Samsung Galaxy Tab, which came in sixth, earned Consumer Reports‘ “Buy” recommendation. The remaining devices on the list, which included, in order of ranking, the ViewSonic ViewPad 7, the Archos 101 Internet Tablet, the Dell Streak and the Archos 70 Internet Tablet, all ranked quite a bit lower than the top six.

via iPad 2 Tops Consumer Reports Tablet Ratings – NYTimes.com.

Europeans concerned over ongoing privacy fraud in U.S. – Computerworld

Self-regulation turns to chaos

But there is much more going on. The rules and policies of Safe Harbor are as soft as butter and there’s no oversight. The main problem lies with the U.S. Department of Commerce, which administers the Safe Harbor list of companies. Companies put themselves on this list through self-certification, without anybody checking anything.

The department itself is clear on this: “In maintaining the list, the Department of Commerce does not assess and makes no representations to the adequacy of any organization’s privacy policy or its adherence to that policy. Furthermore, the Department of Commerce does not guarantee the accuracy of the list and assumes no liability for the erroneous inclusion, misidentification, omission, or deletion of any organization, or any other action related to the maintenance of the list.”

The result of this self-regulation is disastrous. Hundreds of U.S. companies claim they are certified, without meeting the necessary conditions. These problems had already surfaced in 2002 and 2004, when the E.U. commissioned two studies.

In 2008 nothing had improved and the independent research and consultancy company Galexia reached shocking conclusions. Of the 1,597 organizations on the Safe Harbor list, only 348 met all seven principles in the most basic way, Galexia reported.

via Europeans concerned over ongoing privacy fraud in U.S. – Computerworld.

More e-Discovery Trends for 2011

Since we published our e-Discovery predictions for 2011, one more industry vendor has added their predictions to the mix. With only a few days left until 2011, there isn’t much longer until the future is now. Yet, from early case assessment to GRC, it’s apparent that the future of e-Discovery holds many opportunities.

ECA Moves Left

Let’s start with early case assessment. While it wasn’t addressed specifically in our previous list, Steve d’Alencon, Chief Marketing Officer of CaseCentral thinks that in 2011

Software on the “left-side” of the EDRM, concerned with information management, continues to get smarter, meaning that analysis of data can now occur ‘in the wild’ and with this increased intelligence, subsequent collections are getting smaller.

Until now, the primary application of ECA has been to quickly analyze collected data sets to provide insight before moving to full-scale review. According to d’Alencon, early case assessment is better than that and can be expanded to include more analysis and a more narrowed collection of data.

via More e-Discovery Trends for 2011.

Gawker breach fallout: LinkedIn, Amazon reset some users’ passwords

Users and companies are trying to sweep up the mess caused by this weekend’s breach of roughly 1.3 million reader accounts at Gawker Media. And a few of them are showing some surprising, welcome resourcefulness.

LinkedIn, for example, scanned through the archive of usernames, e-mail addresses and passwords posted by the Gawker hackers. When the business-networking site spotted its own users in that list, it reset their passwords and notified them via e-mail.

Amazon has done the same thing. A blog post by Dutch teenager Daan Berg recounts a similar password-reset e-mail from Amazon and compliments the company for its initiative. Washington-based Associated Press video producer Matt Friedman wrote on Twitter that he’d received the same notice and forwarded a copy to me.

Unlike LinkedIn, however, Amazon has yet to post a notice confirming that it’s taken this step. It should: Phishing e-mails will probably adopt this theme as a lure, and the good guys can easily set themselves apart from the bad by saying in public, “Yes, we’re sending those messages.”

via Faster Forward – Gawker breach fallout: LinkedIn, Amazon reset some users’ passwords.