More people are using PDAs for keeping business data, increasing the security problems faced by corporates, according to the second annual PDA Usage Survey. Billions of pounds continue to be wasted each year on corporate security that is easily bypassed . . . . More people are using PDAs for keeping business data, increasing the security problems faced by corporates, according to the second annual PDA Usage Survey. Billions of pounds continue to be wasted each year on corporate security that is easily bypassed because so many employees leave unprotected passwords and corporate information on their personal digital assistants (PDAs), according to a recent survey. The second annual PDA Usage Survey, which was carried out on behalf of Pointsec Mobile Technologies, has discovered that a third of PDA owners store work passwords and cash machine PIN numbers on their PDAs, but do not secure access to their PDA in case the device is stolen or lost. The survey also highlighted that the role of PDAs has changed in the past year. Whereas in 2002 their main use was as a personal organiser, this year the top function is as a business diary. The link for this article located at ZDNetUK is no longer available. . More people are using PDAs for keeping business data, increasing the security problems faced by corp. people, using, keeping, business, increasing, security, problems, faced. . Anthony Pell
In response to the revelation of several holes in its BIND domain name server software this week, the Internet Software Consortium is starting a fee-based, members-only forum, a move that many observers feel will only worsen the software's security problems. The . . . . In response to the revelation of several holes in its BIND domain name server software this week, the Internet Software Consortium is starting a fee-based, members-only forum, a move that many observers feel will only worsen the software's security problems. The forum will be open only to the ISC itself, vendors that include BIND in their products, root and top-level domain name server operators, and other qualified parties admitted at the ISC's discretion. Forum members will receive early warnings of security and other problems with BIND (Berkeley Internet Name Domain) software--and that angers many of BIND's users. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . The discovery of vulnerabilities in BIND DNS server software led to the establishment of a subscription-based forum by ISC, raising alarm among users.. BIND Software Issues, Domain Server Security, ISC Membership Forum. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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