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Results 101-120 of 234 for Gene J. Koprowski

US Considering Next-Gen Technologies in Hurricanes’ Wake

A number of government-led plans are under consideration to rebuild the telecommunications infrastructure in the Gulf Coast, which was badly damaged by Hurricanes Rita and Katrina -- and experts tell TechNewsWorld that technologies from mesh networks to smart radios are likely to be deployed there ...

Search Engine Placement Lawsuit May Chill Free Speech

A lawsuit filed against Web sites that allege search engine results on Google.com were rigged by a placement firm is being watched throughout the Internet industry, as possibly having an impact on the free speech rights of bloggers, experts tell the E-Commerce Times ...

Feds Investigating Fraudulent Katrina-Related Web Sites

The FBI and other federal law enforcement agencies are investigating allegations of fraud by small charities -- or organizations posing as such charities -- that arose in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Online bill payment service PayPal, stepping up its security in response to the concerns over online theft of funds intended for hurricane victims, froze the accounts of a number of charitable projects...

VoIP Providers Say ‘Si’ to Latin, South America

The Internet telephony market in Latin America and South America is poised for considerable growth in the coming years, experts tell TechNewsWorld ...

Phishing Liability Concerns Online Banks

Online banking firms now have a new worry -- liability for customer losses due to phishing scams ...

Non-Profit Moves Internet TV Ahead

Internet TV -- long hyped by Microsoft and other major computer industry players -- has a new advocate. A non-profit corporation is developing a free, open source, Internet TV (IPTV) platform with funding from technology industry luminaries Mitch Kapor and Andy Rappaport. The organization, Worcester, Mass.-based Participatory Culture Foundation, and its Internet TV application, DTV, will deliver full-screen Internet TV to desktops...

‘Big Brother’-Like Monitoring Growing at Work

You have a right to privacy at home, and can e-mail anyone, or visit any Internet site you choose. But do you have the same legal protections at the office? Probably not, experts tell TechNewsWorld, as, increasingly, employers monitor not only e-mail, but Internet usage, and, in some cases, phone calls as well. As the economy expands, employers are anxious to ensure that workers remain productive while they're at the office...

File Sharing Emerging in ‘Walled’ Environments

A number of new music file-sharing projects are in the offing here and overseas, enabling pop music fans to swap songs for a fee ...

Carriers Advancing Broadband Services

Verizon is moving forward aggressively with plans to expand its broadband offerings, throughout the U.S. But experts tell TechNewsWorld that the moves are necessary, and timely, because broadband competition is rapidly accelerating, especially in the wireless market ...

HP, EarthLink Seeking Philadelphia WiFi Project

Consortia led by Hewlett-Packard and Earthlink are the finalists for a proposed city-wide WiFi network in Philadelphia that government officials hope to have online within two months. While San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom is making headlines in the west, back east, the city WiFi network is close to a reality ...

Ritz Camera, Others Embracing Linux for POS

Retailer Ritz Camera Centers is deploying Linux at stores across the country, joining a burgeoning list of retailers that have opted to run their in-store point-of-sale (POS) applications on the open-source operating system ...

Firms Pressing to Raise Immigration Limits for IT Talent

Computer industry firms are struggling to cope with the dearth of IT talent -- especially now that the economy is heating up again. Microsoft founder and chief software architect Bill Gates in July decried the decline in American college students who desire careers in computer science and said something needs to be done about it ...

Sun Growing Significantly Overseas

Sun Microsystems recently reported decreased revenues for the fourth quarter of its fiscal year, but you wouldn't know anything was amiss by the other actions of the company ...

Constitutional Concerns Arise Over Internet Porn Tax

A new bill introduced by a Democratic Senator from Arkansas aimed at taxing online porn sites -- at a 25 percent rate -- is raising Constitutional concerns among legal scholars. The bill is called the Internet Safety and Child Protection Act of 2005 (S 1507), and has been referred to the Senate Finance Committee ...

Banks Employing New Authentication Technologies

Financial institutions are deploying new authentication technologies -- like graphical watermarks -- to hamper hackers who can somehow slip past biometric and token technologies, experts tell TechNewsWorld ...

Firefox Browser Maker Goes for ‘For-Profit’ Status

The idealism behind the Mozilla Foundation -- established in 2003 as a non-profit corporation to promote open-source software -- is giving way this week to financial realism: The company has announced that it is launching a for-profit subsidiary, the Mozilla Corp., to develop, market and distribute Mozilla products ...

Firefox Browser Maker Opts for ‘For-Profit’ Status

The idealism behind the Mozilla Foundation -- established in 2003 as a non-profit corporation to promote open-source software -- is giving way this week to financial realism: The company plans to hold a news conference later this afternoon, at 5 p.m. Pacific time at the O'Reilly Open Source Convention (OSCON 2005) in Portland, Ore., to announce that it is launching a for-profit subsidiary, the Mozilla Corp., to develop, market and distribute Mozilla products...

Group Claims US Inflating Broadband Growth Figures

Is the Federal Communications Commission distorting statistics on broadband subscriber growth in the U.S.? An activist group in New York City thinks so, and has filed a complaint against the FCC, suggesting that the agency is inflating the figures for political purposes ...

PBS, BBC Move Forward With Internet-TV Projects

Two of the world's most important public broadcasters have seen the future of TV -- and it is on the broadband Internet ...

Feds Eye New Mission: Zombie Hunting

The federal government is now in the zombie-hunting business -- and is deputizing virtually every Internet Service Provider in the United States as it seeks to halt the flow of unwanted spam e-mail in this country and overseas ...

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