-
At the core of Web 2.0 are applications that use code written in Ajax and JavaScript, which make them behave in ways that traditional security technologies can’t cope with, explained Alfred Huger, vice president of engineering for Symantec in Santa Monica, Calif. "Ajax blurs the line between the Web and my applications on the desktop," he told the E-Commerce Times.
-
This is the season of frenetic shopping, but for a devious few people it’s also the season of spirited shopdropping. Otherwise known as reverse shoplifting, shopdropping involves surreptitiously putting things in stores, rather than illegally taking them out, and the motivations vary.
-
As online services that make use of personal data multiply, it’s becoming more common for users to need to pass data from one service to another. This often requires users to hand over usernames and passwords, in spite of the obvious security risks involved. A new open-source project called OAuth, released earlier this month, is intended to solve this problem by allowing users to give services a valet key to their identities, rather than full access.
-
The days when the journalist had the last say about a subject are long gone. This thought is usually expressed by repeating – and then dismissing as outdated – the words of A.J. Liebling: "Freedom of the press is guaranteed only to those who own one." Google News, an increasingly popular way to get news online, may tip that balance, however, with a feature it calls "Comments From People in the News."