An Easy Way to Protect Your Intellectual Property More about

Posted on Thursday, February 11, 2010 @ 10:39:24 CST in Internet
by Raven


The following article is taken from ZDNET and was Posted by Doc @ 1:23 pm on February 3rd.


"One question I get on a regular basis is from companies wondering how to get the maximum exposure for their white papers and other material but not loose complete control over their intellectual property. In this free-wheeling time, if you place too many restrictions on your Web-based material, no one will quote from it or pick it up in various blogs and other sites (which is often the point).

So Doc is a big fan of the nonprofit Creative Commons folks, who provide an open and cost-free way to establish copyright and clearly define what others can do with your material.

Creative Commons is dedicated to making it easier for people to share and build upon the work of others, consistent with the rules of copyright. They provide free licenses and other legal tools to mark creative work with the freedom the creator wants it to carry so that others can share it, remix it, use it commercially, or any combination thereof.

The following describes each of the six main licenses offered when you choose to publish your work with a Creative Commons license. They items are listed starting with the most accommodating license type you can choose and ending with the most restrictive license type you can choose:"


Click to Read the entire article
 

 

PCI 101: Getting Started on the Path to Compliance More about

Posted on Thursday, February 04, 2010 @ 17:48:55 CST in Security: TrustWave
by Raven

The Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) was developed by the major credit card companies to help prevent credit card fraud and security vulnerabilities and threats. Companies that process, store or transmit payment card data must be PCI DSS compliant, and must validate compliance periodically.

During this event, a Trustwave expert will describe in detail the 12 requirements and how to meet the terms of the PCI DSS. Level 4 merchants and those who are just beginning the compliance cycle will find this webinar useful.

Please join Trustwave by registering for this event at Register for the North and South American Session.
 

 

Meet the latest open source software developer: Facebook? More about

Posted on Wednesday, February 03, 2010 @ 23:12:14 CST in PHP
by Raven

kguske writes:  

That's right. Facebook is a technology company, serving billions and billions of pages each week (actually, over 100 billion per week, but I couldn't resist a nod to Carl Sagan and McDonald's). And doing so efficiently. So it should come as no surprise that the company has developed some unique software. On Feb. 2, the company released HipHop for PHP.

What is HipHop for PHP? Facebook describes it as:

...a source code transformer. HipHop programmatically transforms your PHP source code into highly optimized C++ and then uses g++ to compile it. HipHop executes the source code in a semantically equivalent manner and sacrifices some rarely used features — such as eval() — in exchange for improved performance. HipHop includes a code transformer, a reimplementation of PHP's runtime system, and a rewrite of many common PHP Extensions to take advantage of these performance optimizations.

This is a fascinating look behind the scenes of arguably one of the most successful websites ever (and certainly, one of the most successful PHP-based websites). But do so quickly before Google, Oracle or someone with higher revenues and / or stock valuation decides to snatch Facebook up...

 

 

InfoWorld compares 8 PHP IDEs More about Read More...

Posted on Wednesday, February 03, 2010 @ 19:48:20 CST in PHP
by Raven

kguske writes:  

InfoWorld reviews 8 PHP integrated development environments (IDEs): ActiveState's Komodo IDE, CodeLobster PHP Edition, Eclipse PHP Development Tools (PDT), MPSoftware's phpDesigner, NetBeans IDE for PHP, NuSphere's PhpED, WaterProof's PHPEdit, and Zend Studio. Comparison factors include ease-of-use, tools, web & SQL support, documentation, installation and value.

And the winner is...

 Read More...
 

 


Sponsorship for RavenNuke(tm) - Can we make it a reality?

The RavenNuke(tm) Team are excited to announce that RavenNuke(tm) v2.40.01 is slated to be released the week of February 7th! This release culminates months of debugging and a few enhancements. Also to be included with this release will be a minor upgrade to NukeSentinel(tm), including a complete IP2C table refresh!

Just a note as to the planned future for RavenNuke(tm). Keep in mind that nothing is ground in stone. How fast we move and how much we can incorporate in any given amount of time is solely dependent on the amount of time the RN Team (voluntary army) can devote to the project. After factoring in their family obligations, job obligations, sanity obligations (R&R), vacations, etc., they can then devote the time left to RN. Oh yes, I forgot a few other small details: eating, sleeping, and waste removal :wink:.

How can YOU help, you ask? The biggest help would be to get someone or a group of people or a company or a group of companies that use(s) RN to sponsor the future development! If there was a set/minimum amount of money allocated each month or for a set of months to be dispersed amongst the development then I'm sure that would be the incentive to work a little harder and to cut into all their extra time that they devote to other things. This would be the best and fastest way to help develop the next major release which is going to be leaps and bounds above what we have done so far.

Any takers? How about it? Anyone work for a company that uses RN? If so, please talk with your management and contact me personally at sponsorship@ravennuke.com. For an open discussion concerning Sponsorship, please use this forum:

Sponsorship for RavenNuke(tm) - Can we make it a reality?

Note: 
We had to move the release date out 1 week - sorry :)
 

 

Malicious Google Job Application Response More about

Posted on Monday, February 01, 2010 @ 14:53:53 CST in Security: Websense
by Raven

Websense Security Labs(tm) ThreatSeeker(tm) Network has discovered a new malicious spam campaign that spoofs Google job application responses. The messages look very well written and are so believable that they are probably scrapes from actual Google job application responses. Typically, spam has grammatical errors or spelling mistakes that make the messages obviously unofficial and act as red flags. The text of these messages, however, has no such mistakes, making them much more believable--especially if the target really has applied for a job with Google.

The From: address is even spoofed to fool victims into believing the message was sent by Google. The messages have an attached file called CV-20100120-112.zip that contains a malicious payload. This is where the message gets suspicious, because the contents of the .zip file have a double extension ending with .exe. The attackers attempt to hide the .exe extension by preceding it with .html or .pdf, followed by a number of spaces and then the .exe extension. The .exe file (SHA1:80366cde71b84606ce8ecf62b5bd2e459c54942e) has little AV coverage at the moment.

To view the details of this alert Click here
 



Page 51 of 659 (3950 total stories) [ << | < | 46 | 47 | 48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | > | >> ]  

News ©

Site Info

Last SeenLast Seen
  • vashd1
  • neralex
Server TrafficServer Traffic
  • Total: 512,929,094
  • Today: 220,232
Server InfoServer Info
  • Apr 22, 2025
  • 10:57 pm CDT