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May 7th, 2010 by Ruth Jones

Expose on Infosec social media buzz

With the prominence of traditional media diminishing and the buzz growing around how brands should behave in social communities, we took a look how this was impacting conversation and content during the UK’s largest IT security tradeshow, InfoSecurity Europe.

The general buzz around #Infosec and #Infosec 2010 kicked off on Monday 26th April, with conversations peaking around 10am and 2pm on the first and second days of the show. With conversation beginning to dwindle on Thursday morning, it was Symantec’s acquisition of PGP and GuardianEdge mid-day on Thursday that caused the chatter to peak.

The #Infosec hashtag peaked at 26 tweets an hour and we reviewed roughly 752 tweets mentioning Infosec during the course of the show.  I’m not a mathematician, but that is around seven per cent of the 12,000 registered information security professionals using the show hash tags. Whilst, this may seem low, hash tag tracking is just one tool for monitoring conversation. Vendors were actively being discussed, old colleagues were arranging to meet and when Symantec made its announcement, the news quickly spread.

So, who was talking about what?

On Twitter…

Symantec to acquire PGP and GuardianEdge

Seizing of Gizmodo editor Jason Chen’s computers

Who needs exploits when you have social engineering

PDF malware using net attack technique

In the media…

Symantec acquires PGP and GuardianEdge (169)

Data breach notification law coming, says watchdog (54)

PwC report shows bleak security landscape (22)

And, the analyst take..

Gartner, Bob Walder: Infosec 2010 London “the only surprise being that HP didn’t try to trump Symantec’s acquisition announcements by grabbing McAfee!”

Bloor, Nigel Stanley: Time to hug a PGP employee? “Very rarely do I ever get to witness the effects of a corporate takeover first hand but the acquisition of PGP by Symantec”

Bloor, Bob Tarzey: The big yellow monster strikes again “the latest news makes Symantec even more of a force to be reckoned with”

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April 27th, 2010 by Chris McCrudden

#Infosec – today’s top Twitter stories…

The security community converged on London today for the kick off of Infosecurity Europe 2010.

Over the past few weeks we’ve been following almost 500 security voices on Twitter (ranging from vendors to journalists to bloggers). Each afternoon of the show we’ll be posting a summary of the top stories being talked about online.

We’re compiling this round-up using a range of social media tools such as Twitter Times, Twittermeme and Hootsuite.

Aside from multiple tweets on hangovers and collapsing keynote stages, here are the top stories from #Infosec today…

VMforce: VMWare and Salesforce announced plans to launch VMforce Enterprise Java Cloud, which will provide more than 6 million enterprise Java developers with an open path to cloud computing – @vmforce posted this blog from Steve Herrod.

McAfee: After last week’s flawed signature update McAfee said that it will offer compensation to home and home office users – and unveiled next generation firewall (along with @watchguardtech and @sonicwall).

Cisco expanded its content security arsenal: Cisco launched a data loss prevention and web security service as part of its Secure Borderless Network initiative (by @phil_V3).

There’s been lots of talk about the seizing of Gizmodo editor Jason Chen’s computers last Friday in California. And a number of security watchers also returned to an article from 2007, for insight in how to get ahead in information security.

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April 26th, 2010 by michael.frier

Daily News – 26/04

The Guardian – Will Foursquare be the new Twitter?
An application that allows friends to track one another’s movements when they’re out and about could be the next big thing in social networking

Total Telecom – YouTube opens movie rental store
Google Inc.’s YouTube on Thursday opened a video rental store, the company’s latest step in its effort to transform the popular video Web site into a profitable business.

Information Age – SaaS set to boom in the UK

A new report from UK-based IT analyst company TechMarketView has predicted that software-as-a-service offerings will receive 15 per cent of all UK software and IT services spending by 2012, up from 5 per cent in 2009.

The Daily Telegraph – McAfee apologises for update fiasco

Antivirus company McAfee has apologised for issuing an update that crippled thousands of computers around the world. Writing in the company’s blog, Barry McPherson, executive vice-president of support and customer service, wrote “I want to apologize on behalf of McAfee and say that we’re extremely sorry for any impact the faulty signature update file may have caused you and your organizations.”

SC Magazine – Opportunities and challenges in social networking

The challenge of social networking in a business environment has been tackled in a new think tank from SC Studio.

The Times – Facebook sets up Google-war with vast expansion through Open Graph

Facebook has announced plans to spread its influence more widely across the internet by weaving its service into all websites.

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November 3rd, 2009 by Speed Budapest (Matt)

Daily News 03/11

The Daily Telegraph – Web could run out of addresses next year, warn web experts
Businesses urgently need to upgrade to IPv6, a new version of the internet’s addressing protocol that will hugely increase the number of available addresses. A survey, conducted by the European Commission, found that few companies are prepared for the switch from the current naming protocol, IPv4, to the new regime, IPv6. Web experts have warned that we could run out of internet addresses within the next two years unless more companies migrate to the new platform.

The Daily Telegraph – Broadband tax will force 100,000 homes to give up internet connection, warns Dunstone
Charles Dunstone, the chief executive of TalkTalk, fears the Government’s plans to boost rural broadband coverage will penalise poorer households. Mr Dunstone estimates that around 100,000 lower income households will be forced to give up their own internet connections in able to cover the 50p per month tax that will be added to all domestic phone bills to fund the roll-out of next-generation broadband networks.

Computer Weekly – Use IT to innovate, says Gartner
Banks and financial services companies need to use IT to promote innovation rather than focusing on cutting costs, according to analyst group Gartner. Gartner research vice-president, Peter Redshaw, said innovation is essential to firms as they prepare for recovery. However, many firms are too focused on the short-term goals of surviving the downturn, he said.

Computer Weekly – Online retailers ready to spend big on IT
Online retailers are not waiting for the economic recovery before investing in new technology, as confidence grows that the sector will rebound faster than others. Online sales have not been hit as hard by the economic slowdown as high street sales. Despite the recession, the average monthly increase this year of online sales is 15 per cent, according to the latest research from IMRG and Capgemini.

IT PRO – Pirate Bay prosecution saw explosion of file sharing
The number of file sharing websites that host pirated content has increased by 300 per cent over the last three months. So claims security company McAfee, which said that when the Pirate Bay was being prosecuted in August, many sites sprang up to help users who were looking for new places to get pirated content.