Security

Recent Articles

  • Ingram Micro Pays $15M Fine for Channel Stuffing Scheme

    IT distributor Ingram Micro paid a hefty price for helping Network Associates (now McAfee) in an elaborate channel stuffing scheme over a period of two years that inflated Ingram Micro’s profit margins and McAfee’s revenues by hundreds of millions of dollars during the height of the dot-com boom. Ingram Micro has paid a $15 million…

  • Rogue DBAs: Hidden Inside Security Threat

    If your enterprise customers seem unaware of the dangers to their databases posed by rogue employees, it might be time to tell them the story of Timothy Curley. Employed by American Express as a database administrator; Curley was arrested on June 24 by the U.S. Secret Service on claims from his former employer that he…

  • 6 Do or Die Database Security Strategies

    6 Do or Die Database Security Strategies As solution providers ponder how they can help customers protect their sensitive information, one of their key targets should be the corporate database. Databases are where most organizations store the bulk of their information and yet they remain woefully unprotected. According to the 2009 Data Breach Investigations Report…

  • Verizon Business Rolls Out Application Security Program

    Verizon Business hopes to cash in on the customer need to shore up insecure applications with a new service introduced on Thursday. The Verizon Business Application Security Program is aimed squarely at the dynamic and sometimes chaotic development environments within U.S. enterprises. "Businesses are often stuck in a Catch-22 situation when it comes to applications,"…

  • Microsoft VARs View Google Chrome OS as Opportunity

    Plenty of pundits are talking about how much Microsoft has to lose when Google releases its Chrome operating system, scheduled to debut on consumer netbooks at the end of 2010. And aside from Linux itself, Google’s forthcoming Linux-based Chrome OS may very well pose the biggest threat to Microsoft’s OS dominance that the company has…

  • Sony to Offer $500 Vaio W Series Mini-Notebook

    Sony is getting into the netbook mini-notebook game with the release of its new Vaio W series line, squarely aimed at consumers and carrying a hefty price tag of about $500 in the United States – one that puts the netbook in competition against some of the less expensive traditional laptop computers. Sony is only…

Get the Free Newsletter

Subscribe to Channel Insider to be informed on the changing IT landscape.

You must input a valid work email address.
You must agree to our terms.