" The Roving Giraffe News Report " provided through Ace News Service
This blog is dedicated to ALL things social media and as I am a true sharer of posts and tweets as I have been converted over the past few years.I wanted to share my thoughts and feelings.There will also be freeware and special offers available. Would like to add your software, gadget or write-up and share your thoughts and feelings. Thank you, Ian {Editor}
Thursday, 14 July 2011
Infographic Of The Day: Using Twitter And Flickr Geotags To Map The World | Co.Design
" The Roving Giraffe News Report " provided through Ace News Service
Wednesday, 29 June 2011
Facebook Spam On The Rise
[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]" This article is published on his site by my friend Prash it is well worth a visit as his advice is excellent and please a comment and he will get back to you with an answer.
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Tuesday, 24 May 2011
Apple AirPlay lands on Windows Media Center
No music yet, but it's a start
A clever chap by the name of Thomas Pleasance has got in touch with Pocket-lint with news of a big breakthrough - Apple AirPlay via a PC using Windows Media Center.
Now, before you go getting all excited about streaming your iTunes music collection to your nettop and home cinema system, we better tell you that there's no music support at the moment, just video and picture streaming from your iPad, iPhone or iPod touch.
The add-in works in tandem with Apple's Bonjour service and apparently works 'seamlessly'.
It's only in its first beta stage at the moment but Thomas has already hinted at some of the new features going forward, including extenders support.
It's music that we want though, so we'll be keeping a keen eye on Thomas' progress and we'll let you know if and when that support lands.
In the meantime you can download the free add-in at madeformediacenter.com. It's free.
Tags:
AirPlay Windows Media Center Software Apple
Apple AirPlay lands on Windows Media Center originally appeared on http://www.pocket-lint.com on Tue, 24 May 2011 10:55:00 +0100
" I will give it a try and report back my findings both good and bad "" The Roving Giraffe News Report " provided through Ace News Service
Monday, 23 May 2011
A New Suite of Safety Tools
Safety has always been a social experience: as friends and family, we look out for each other and pass along advice to help each other stay safe. Safety on Facebook works the same way. By keeping each other informed, people make Facebook a more trusted environment. Today, we're making it easier to stay safe with the launch of new safety resources, tools for reporting issues and additional security features.
More Resources for Families
During President Obama's White House Conference on Bullying Prevention last month, we announced plans to expand our existing safety resources with new content for families. Beginning today, you can visit the newly redesigned Family Safety Center. There, you'll find useful articles for parents and teens and videos on safety and privacy, as well as many other resources. In the coming weeks, we'll also be providing a free, downloadable guide for teachers, written by safety experts Linda Fogg Phillips, B.J. Fogg and Derek Baird. We hope this guide will help educators with social media in the classroom.
Meet some of the team who work on safety at Facebook, many of whom are also parents.
Social Reporting Tools
We also recently unveiled a new social reporting tool that allows people to notify a member of their community, in addition to Facebook, when they see something they don't like. Safety and child psychology experts tell us that online issues are frequently a reflection of what is happening offline. By encouraging people to seek help from friends, we hope that many of these situations can be resolved face to face. The impact has been encouraging, and we're now expanding social reporting to other major sections of Facebook, including Profiles, Pages and Groups.
Advanced Security Features
We're also starting to introduce Two Factor Authentication, a new feature to help prevent unauthorized access to your account. If you turn this new feature on, we'll ask you to enter a code anytime you try to log into Facebook from a new device. This additional security helps confirm that it's really you trying to log in.
We announced earlier this year that people could experience Facebook over a secure connection using HTTPS. This feature helps protect your personal information and is particularly useful if you're uncertain about the security of your network or you're using public wifi to access Facebook. Today, we're improving HTTPS so if you start using a non-HTTPS application on Facebook, we automatically switch your session back to HTTPS when you're finished.
We think that social solutions to safety will become increasingly important to using the web. Tools like social reporting will help make our community even stronger, and we encourage you to use them.
Arturo, a director of engineering at Facebook, is excited about social reporting.
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'Toyota Friend' Social Networking Service Is A Twitter For Car Owners
TOKYO -- Toyota is setting up a social networking service with the help of a U.S. Internet company and Microsoft so drivers can interact with their cars in ways similar to Twitter and Facebook.
Japanese automaker Toyota Motor Corp. and Salesforce.com, based in San Francisco, announced their alliance Monday to launch 'Toyota Friend,' a private social network for Toyota owners that works similar to tweets on Twitter.
Read More...
More on Social Networking
" This should be really interesting and will it be a prelude to other similar companies using social media as an avenue for getting facial and social awareness of peoples needs. ?
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Numbered: The Week's Must-See Tech Stats
'Numbered,' our weekly digits digest, is bringing you the numbers behind the news.
This feature highlights the top new stats, facts, and figures to bring you the latest on tech, by the numbers, and quantify the changing state of mobile, social media, and more.
In this week's edition: Sony predicts major losses, LinkedIn's value soars, Microsoft warns of attacks, and more. See last week's stats here.
Read More...
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President Obama's cybersecurity plan - Part 2 Data Breach Notification Act
Following up on yesterday's post outlining the proposed changes to RICO and the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, today I will dissect the White House's proposal for the National Data Breach Notification Act.
Currently 47 states have data breach notification laws with varying rules and requirements. This makes it very difficult for national and multinational organizations to understand when they must report lost or stolen data and how they must report it. The idea of a national law in the US has been debated for a couple of years now, and this proposal seems to strike a nice balance.
First, the definition of Personally Identifiable Information, or PII:
- Full name plus any two of the following
- Address and phone number
- Mother's maiden name
- Month, day, and year of birth
- Social Security Number (SSN), driver's license number, passport number, alien registration number, or other government issued identification number
- Biometric data such as fingerprints, retinal scans, etc.
- Unique account numbers, financial account numbers, credit card numbers, debit card numbers, electronic IDs, user names or routing codes
- Any combination of the following
- First and last name or first initial and last name
- See item four above
- Security codes, access codes, passwords or source codes used to derive the aforementioned
The new rules would apply to any business possessing the PII of 10,000 or more individuals in a 12-month period. They would supersede any existing state laws, creating one unified national standard.
Organizations discovering lost or stolen PII would have 60 days to notify affected customers unless law enforcement or national security concerns intervene. If there are extenuating circumstances, organizations can provide proof to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) that they require up to an additional 30 days.
The proposal includes a 'safe harbor' provision when measures are in place to protect data (encryption). Organizations must still report the data loss to the FTC within 45 days, including a professional risk assessment, logs of access to the data and a complete list of users who had access to the protected data.
If data is determined to be properly protected and evidence is submitted on time, individual notifications would be unnecessary. Financial institutions who only lose account numbers are also exempt if other protective measures are in place to prevent fraud.
After a data loss incident, organizations would be required to notify individuals by letter, phone or email.
Notices would include what information was compromised and a toll-free number to contact the company responsible to obtain more information. If a third party lost the data, the notice must include the name of the original collector (direct business relationship) of the PII.
States may pass laws requiring notifications to include information about identity theft/fraud prevention.
When more than 5,000 victims are involved, organizations would be required to do the following:
- Place advertisements in mass media ensuring potential victims are aware of the risk they are being exposed to.
- Notify all consumer credit reporting agencies of the victims within 60 days of discovery.
Businesses would be required to notify the Department of Homeland Security for law enforcement purposes when any of the following are true:
- The breach contains, or is believed to contain, PII on 5,000 or more individuals.
- The breach involves a database or network of databases that contain PII on 500,000 or more individuals.
- The breach involves a database owned by the United States government.
- The breach involves PII of employees or contractors of the United States government involved in law enforcement or national security.
Notice to DHS must occur 72 hours before individual notices are served, or 10 days after discovery of the incident, whichever comes first.
The proposed rules would be enforced by the FTC after consultation with the US Attorney General to ensure there is no interference with ongoing criminal investigations. State Attorneys General would also be able to enforce the rules within their jurisdiction after notifying the FTC.
Penalties for non-compliance would be $1000 per person affected per day, for a maximum of $1 million. There would not be a maximum penalty if it is determined the non-compliance was willful or intentional.
Organizations that are required to comply with HIPAA or HITECH data protection laws are exempt from this legislation.
It appears the Obama Administration and Howard Schmidt, the President's Cyber-Security Coordinator, have taken careful notes from the different laws passed by individual states. This proposal is a great start to making data security a priority and contains provisions to make adjustments after implementation.
Why not download the 'The State of Data Security' report we published today? It covers the most prominent data loss incidents and details the actions you can take to prevent you from being the next company to have to notify your customers.
" WELL DOES IT GO FAR ENOUGH - OR TO FAR - LEAVE YOUR COMMENTS ?
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