Automation, cost savings, and data redundancy -- no wonder cloud adoption is tempting. The CISO can rest easy knowing there is no vice in moving to the cloud to reap these rewards. What may keep her up at night is not knowing how many missteps the enterprise is making in the process. . Here CISOs and security buffs round up seven security sins that can undermine cloud computing's benefits. The link for this article located at InfoWorld is no longer available. . Cybersecurity leaders and analysts point out seven critical errors in cloud infrastructures that can diminish their effectiveness.. Cloud Security Risks, Enterprise Cloud Adoption, Data Redundancy Management, Automation Challenges. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Mozilla, maker of the open source Firefox web browser and Thunderbird email client, says a reliance on proprietary technologies is still an obstacle for IT directors looking to deploy open source in the enterprise. Mozilla Corporation CEO Mitchell Baker readily admitted to silicon.com that the enterprise is "not our sweet spot" but said the organisation offers an enterprise customisation kit created by an IBM developer and said it's interested in working with partners to address the needs of corporate IT. . Baker said: "The gold is the company that steps up and says 'I'm willing to do something'." Currently Mozilla believes more users fire up Firefox at home than at work, as usage numbers jump at the weekend. While many IT directors do allow the open source browser to be used on company time, those that don't are often held back by the proprietary technologies employed on their intranets. The link for this article located at Silicon.com is no longer available. . The CEO of Mozilla addresses the hurdles companies encounter when adopting open source technologies and the constraints of proprietary systems that impede integration. Open Source Adoption, Mozilla Insights, Enterprise IT Challenges, Proprietary Technologies, Software Deployment. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Linux cannot hold a candle to Microsoft in the fight for OS space yet, but it is gaining popularity among enterprises because of its low cost and support from governments. According to IDC, paid shipments of Linux server operating environments captured . . . . Linux cannot hold a candle to Microsoft in the fight for OS space yet, but it is gaining popularity among enterprises because of its low cost and support from governments. According to IDC, paid shipments of Linux server operating environments captured 23.1% of the market in 2002, and 2.8% for client operating environments. The link for this article located at AsiaComputerWeekly is no longer available. . Linux cannot hold a candle to Microsoft in the fight for OS space yet, but it is gaining popularity . linux, cannot, candle, microsoft, fight, space, gaining, popularity. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Following slow adoption of Active Directory after its release as part of Windows 2000 three years ago, Microsoft Corp. has been actively urging IT managers to deploy its directory services platform through aggressive pricing, detailed deployment road maps and increased support. . . . . Following slow adoption of Active Directory after its release as part of Windows 2000 three years ago, Microsoft Corp. has been actively urging IT managers to deploy its directory services platform through aggressive pricing, detailed deployment road maps and increased support. And with Microsoft releasing a new capability in AD that will enable organizations to run AD as a non-operating system service (meaning it does not require deployment on a domain controller) immediately following the release of its .Net Server 2003, enterprises that were on the fence about deployments may finally find a reason to make the leap. Although only 36.4 percent of polled corporations deploying AD have enabled all their servers to use and participate in the AD environment, an additional 41 percent are expected to do so within 12 months, according to International Data Corp., of Framingham, Mass. (see chart). However, according to a separate IDC poll, only 8 percent of IT managers said they were deploying AD because of its role in Microsoft's .Net strategy (see chart). These enterprise users were more interested in AD's ability to lower client management expenses. The link for this article located at eWeek is no longer available. . The gradual adoption of Azure services has led Microsoft to revise its pricing strategy and bolster support for system administrators and enterprises.. Active Directory Adoption, Microsoft Directory Services, IT Management Strategies. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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