Anticipated Amazon Tablet to Take Aim at Apple iPad – NYTimes.com

One after another, like moths to a flame, computer makers have been seduced into entering the market for tablets. Apple made it look so irresistible, with 29 million eager and sometimes fanatical consumers snapping up an iPad in the device’s first 15 months.

But neither Samsung nor Motorola nor Acer could beg or borrow any of Apple’s magic. Research in Motion, the maker of the BlackBerry, said it shipped only 200,000 of its PlayBooks in three months — about what Apple sells in three days. Hewlett-Packard, which flopped this summer with the TouchPad, was the latest to get burned.

Now comes a final competitor, the best-placed challenger of all: Amazon.com. The retailer is on the verge of introducing its own tablet, analysts predict, a souped-up color version of its Kindle e-reader that will undercut the iPad in price and aim to steal away a couple of million in unit sales by Christmas.

A competition between Amazon and Apple tablets will be a battle that pits the company that created the first popular e-reader (and set off a still-unfolding revolution in how books are consumed) against the company that created the first popular tablet (and set off a revolution in progress about how entertainment and other media are consumed).

via Anticipated Amazon Tablet to Take Aim at Apple iPad – NYTimes.com.

Internet Security Experts Introduce Secure DNS in Singapore – NYTimes.com

A small group of Internet security specialists gathered in Singapore this week to start up a global system to make e-mail and e-commerce more secure, end the proliferation of passwords and raise the bar significantly for Internet scam artists, spies and troublemakers.

“It won’t matter where you are in the world or who you are in the world, you’re going to be able to authenticate everyone and everything,” said Dan Kaminsky, an independent network security researcher who is one of the engineers involved in the project.

The Singapore event included an elaborate technical ceremony to create and then securely store numerical keys that will be kept in three hardened data centers there, in Zurich and in San Jose, Calif. The keys and data centers are working parts of a technology known as Secure DNS, or DNSSEC. DNS refers to the Domain Name System, which is a directory that connects names to numerical Internet addresses. Preliminary work on the security system had been going on for more than a year, but this was the first time the system went into operation, even though it is not quite complete.

The three centers are fortresses made up of five layers of physical, electronic and cryptographic security, making it virtually impossible to tamper with the system. Four layers are active now. The fifth, a physical barrier, is being built inside the data center.

via Internet Security Experts Introduce Secure DNS in Singapore – NYTimes.com.

Privacy Law Is Outrun by Speed of Web’s Progress – NYTimes.com

Concerned by the wave of requests for customer data from law enforcement agencies, Google last year set up an online tool showing the frequency of these requests in various countries. In the first half of 2010, it counted more than 4,200 in the United States.

Google is not alone among Internet and telecommunications companies in feeling inundated with requests for information. Verizon told Congress in 2007 that it received some 90,000 such requests each year. And Facebook told Newsweek in 2009 that subpoenas and other orders were arriving at the company at a rate of 10 to 20 a day.

As Internet services — allowing people to store e-mails, photographs, spreadsheets and an untold number of private documents — have surged in popularity, they have become tempting targets for law enforcement. That phenomenon became apparent over the weekend when it surfaced that the Justice Department had sought the Twitter account activity of several people linked to WikiLeaks, the antisecrecy group.

Many Internet companies and consumer advocates say the main law governing communication privacy — enacted in 1986, before cellphone and e-mail use was widespread, and before social networking was even conceived — is outdated, affording more protection to letters in a file cabinet than e-mail on a server.

They acknowledge that access to information is important for fighting crime and terrorism, but say they are dealing with a patchwork of confusing standards that have been interpreted inconsistently by the courts, creating uncertainty.

via Privacy Law Is Outrun by Speed of Web’s Progress – NYTimes.com.

LogMeIn Taunts Cisco and Citrix With Free Web Meeting App – NYTimes.com

Microsoft, I.B.M., Cisco Systems and Citrix have some new, plucky competition when it comes to Web meeting software.

LogMeIn, a small company I profiled earlier this month, has released its own online meeting and collaboration tool, join.me. As usual, LogMeIn has tried to undercut its much larger rivals by dishing out a free service that requires less configuration set-up. Both home and office users can conduct meetings with up to 250 people — free.

To use the software, you go to the join.me Web site, click to share your computer and then get a code. You can send that code to anyone you like and off you go. People receive a phone number for holding conference calls, can send instant messages during presentations and can share control of a screen.

Cisco charges $49 per host, per month for its popular WebEx software. Citrix also charges $49 per month for GoToMeeting.

LogMeIn charges $29 per month for a “pro” version of join.me that has meeting schedulers, personalized access codes, and some others bits and bobs around account management.

via LogMeIn Taunts Cisco and Citrix With Free Web Meeting App – NYTimes.com.

U.S. Wants to Make It Easier to Wiretap the Internet – NYTimes.com

Federal law enforcement and national security officials are preparing to seek sweeping new regulations for the Internet, arguing that their ability to wiretap criminal and terrorism suspects is “going dark” as people increasingly communicate online instead of by telephone.

Essentially, officials want Congress to require all services that enable communications — including encrypted e-mail transmitters like BlackBerry, social networking Web sites like Facebook and software that allows direct “peer to peer” messaging like Skype — to be technically capable of complying if served with a wiretap order. The mandate would include being able to intercept and unscramble encrypted messages.

The bill, which the Obama administration plans to submit to lawmakers next year, raises fresh questions about how to balance security needs with protecting privacy and fostering innovation. And because security services around the world face the same problem, it could set an example that is copied globally.

via U.S. Wants to Make It Easier to Wiretap the Internet – NYTimes.com.

Cloud Computing Hits Snag in Europe – NYTimes.com

In the world of ideas, cloud computing has the potential to revolutionize the way people work.

By bundling the processing power of thousands of computer servers, a company, for example, could allow two employees from different countries who speak different languages to communicate directly by phone, using voice recognition software to process what is being said and translation programs to interpret it into another language.

The result, ideally, would be a seamless conversation, without struggle and without the limitations of speaking a foreign language.

“We’re not quite there yet, but it’s coming,” Eric E. Schmidt, the chief executive of Google, a promoter of the technology, said at a gathering of cellphone industry executives after evoking the image at a convention in Barcelona in February.

Such cloud-based breakthroughs face a formidable obstacle in Europe, however: strict privacy laws that place rigid limits on the movement of information beyond the borders of the 27-country European Union.

European governments fear that personal information could fall prey to aggressive marketers and cybercriminals once it leaves the jurisdictions of individual members, a concern that may protect consumers but one that hinders the free flow of data essential to cloud computing

via Cloud Computing Hits Snag in Europe – NYTimes.com.

Fastest Net Service in U.S. Coming to Chattanooga – NYTimes.com

In the global race to see who can offer the fastest Internet service, an unlikely challenger has emerged: Chattanooga, Tenn.

The city-owned utility, EPB, plans to announce on Monday that by the end of this year it will offer ultra-high-speed Internet service of up to one gigabit a second. That is 200 times faster than the average broadband speed in America.

Only Hong Kong and a few other cities in the world offer such lightning-fast service, and analysts say Chattanooga will be the first in the United States to do so. “This makes Chattanooga — a midsized city in the South — one of the leading cities in the world in its digital capabilities,” said Ron Littlefield, the city’s mayor.

There is one caveat: the highest-speed service will cost $350 a month, a price that may appeal to some businesses but few households, even though the service will be offered to all the 170,000 homes and businesses EPB serves.

“We don’t know how to price a gig,” said Harold DePriest, chief executive of EPB. “We’re experimenting. We’ll learn.”

via Fastest Net Service in U.S. Coming to Chattanooga – NYTimes.com.

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S.E.C. Looks for Lehman-Style Accounting on Wall St. – NYTimes.com

The Securities and Exchange Commission said on Monday it had started an inquiry into about two dozen financial companies to determine whether they followed accounting practices similar to those recently disclosed in an investigation of Lehman Brothers.

The commission is interested in transactions known as repurchase agreements, which are a common way that investment banks provide funds for trading activities. The commission wants to know whether other Wall Street players used tactics like those that Lehman used to mask their debt levels from investors.

The commission announced that it had sent inquiry letters but did not list the companies they were sent to. The inquiry comes as part of the S.E.C.’s duties to review financial filings of public companies. Any red flags in the answers will be forwarded to the S.E.C.’s enforcement unit, which has the power to bring charges.

Since Lehman was accused of using a transaction known as Repo 105 in 2008 to hide about $50 billion in debt, analysts have said there should be a widespread inquiry of accounting on Wall Street before the financial crisis.

“There were a multitude of games that were going on in accounting,” said Janet Tavakoli, president of Tavakoli Structured Finance. “It’s good the S.E.C. is looking at Repo 105, but it obviously leads to other questions.”

via S.E.C. Looks for Lehman-Style Accounting on Wall St. – NYTimes.com.

EU Clears Bank Data Transfers to United States – NYTimes.com

European Union ministers handed U.S. anti-terror investigators broad access to Europeans' bank data on Monday, overcoming concerns by several member states over privacy protection.

The agreement ensures the United States has continued access to information after data collected by Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) is moved from databases and servers in the United States to Europe this year.

Without it, any terror investigations would rely on the goodwill of individual European countries to offer information after 2009.

Swedish diplomats said the agreement, which goes into effect in February and has to be ratified by the European Parliament, provided sufficient privacy protection for bank customers.

“The adopted agreement improves the protection of data and we have an anti-terrorism system that's efficient and proportionate,” Tobias Billstrom, minister for migration and asylum policy, told reporters.

Sweden holds the six-month rotating presidency of the EU.

Under the agreement, only data referring to people with links to terrorist activities can be made available to investigators, and information about transfers within the EU is excluded.

via EU Clears Bank Data Transfers to United States – NYTimes.com.