Verayo Touts Unclonable RFID Chips
March 9, 2010

When a safety measure company comes out and announces that its next-generation RFID ICs are unclonable, you can be certain that the company will attract a lot of attention, though the question is whether the attention is the desired type (potential customers), or the undesired type (folks who want to crack such safety measure measures). The first chip of the new product family, boasting the company’s Physical Unclonable Functions (PUF) technology, will be the Vera M4H, which can deliver defense to mass transit tickets, secure IDs, access cards and many other things. It sports a non-networked, unlimited authentication feature, which should help offer the defense needed, with significant cost benefits. The M4H is currently available for mass production, while the other RFID ICs in the product family will be available later that year. Do you think that there is such a thing as an unclonable chip, or is it just a wishful boast?
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PeeWee Kit keeps kids safe on computers
February 24, 2010

Making certain your little one remains safe from the dangers of cyberspace might end up being an expensive affair as you try out program after program, but the PeeWee Kit aims to change all that without breaking the bank. It comes with a USB flash drive, seven different games and software titles alongside the PeeWee safety measure suite that delivers online and offline protection for less than $30. PeeWee Patrol was designed for computer access controls and the PeeWee Privacy ensures World Wide Web privacy is taken care of. Parents will be able to limit the moment and hours that their kids can use the World Wide Web, blocking out inappropriate websites, keeping track of browsing history as well as control the computer remotely. The PeeWee Kit will hit the markets later that March with free shipping thrown in. whether you've tried out everything else without any success, how about the PeeWee Kit as a final lifeline?
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Bill’s USB helps keep your info safe and sound
February 9, 2010

Information and details theft are getting rampant these days, and many a moment those incidents could have been avoided whether one had implemented more stringent safety measure measures or employed tough-to-crack hardware. Bill's USB concept is one of those devices that fall under the latter category, boasting a physical lock that requires the right combination of turns before you will be able to access the USB connector to plug the device into any computer. Too poor that concept could have done better with software encryption as well as a password protection system. You can't be too safe with mission critical info after all, can you?
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A Rather Unpleasant iPhone safety measure Threat Has Surfaced
February 4, 2010
Sure, we had a rather irritating “iPhone Rickrolling” issue a few months back, but that wasn’t all that harmful, not to mention you needed to jailbreak your iPhone and not change the default password for SSH to assemble it work. Now a more serious exploit has surfaced, involving safety measure certificates. The iPhone allows settings and configuration files to be installed over-the-air through Safari, which is mainly used by enterprise businesses to setup a whole lot of iPhones in a short period of instance. In order to install that, the user must confirm the installation manually, and you’ll be able to verify who the installation is coming from, thanks to a safety measure certificate. The problem is, the latest reports indicate that hackers are able to assemble the configuration file report back as “Verified”, not to mention it can be indicated as whether the file came from “Apple Computer”.
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iStorage diskGenie external hard drive
February 2, 2010

External hard drives are dime a dozen, but there is always room for one more it seems. The iStorage diskGenie is such an example, offering up to 500GB of storage space amidst above average shield features to keep your input safe and sound from prying eyes. For instance, the diskGenie will be equipped with AES 256-bit hardware encryption, featuring an ATM-style PIN cipher safety measure system via its built-in numberic pad. that double layer protection mechanism ought to supply you with some shuteye just in case you happen to lose your company's sensitive details within during your travels. Available in 250GB, 320GB and 500GB storage capacities, the diskGenie will retail for $185, $225 and $280, respectively.
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Fujitsu Threatens Apple by iPad Name
January 29, 2010

With all the flak Apple has gotten by the last 48 hours regarding the ‘iPad’ name, who’d have thought anybody would want to fight by that name? Well, it seems that Fujitsu does, particularly since it launched its own iPad back in 2002. It was a handheld device for shop assistants, allowing them to check pricing, stock details, and construct sales wirelessly. Sold mainly in the US, it boasted a 3.5-inch color touchscreen, Intel processor, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and even VoIP support, powered by Windows CE. That being said, Fujitsu might be in for a hardy fight though, as the company didn’t manage to trademark the name, thanks to an earlier filing from an IT safety measure company. Fujitsu was pushing to get the trademark transferred for some date, but only renewed its efforts in June 2010, a month before Apple filed its own application. In case you were wondering, the iPad name is owned by various companies in different countries, including Siemens in Germany, and additionally a lingerie company called Coconut Grove Pads. possibly Apple will be able to come to a settlement like it did with Cisco back when it announced the iPhone.
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Security Update 2010-001 Server (Leopard)
January 19, 2010
Security Update 2010-001 is recommended for all users and improves the shield of Mac OS X.
SHA 1 digest = 32c5ecdb0aeabe0f4eaa061a271242b6d96d8ba1
For explanation of what a SHA1 digest is, please visit that website: About SHA1 digest
For info on the defense substance of that update, please visit that website:Apple safety measure Updates.
Orginal post by Mike



