Verizon Wireless has been subtly altering the web traffic of its wireless customers for the past two years, inserting a string of about 50 letters, numbers, and characters into data flowing between these customers and the websites they visit.. The company The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . AT&T's modification of broadband users' data transmission poses risks to personal confidentiality and confidence in digital safety.. Verizon Data Manipulation, Web Traffic Security, User Privacy Implications, Traffic Security Risks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A security system startup venture has taken the wraps off a new type of encryption-processing scheme that it claims can increase performance over competing technologies by as much as tenfold. As a result, Andes Networks Inc. expects to see the cost . . . . A security system startup venture has taken the wraps off a new type of encryption-processing scheme that it claims can increase performance over competing technologies by as much as tenfold. As a result, Andes Networks Inc. expects to see the cost of implementing security features fall so low, so fast, that all traffic over the public Internet could be encrypted within a few years. The company has focused on the secure sockets layer (SSL) format, which has become a de facto standard for Web traffic. Although it is not often used for full encryption and authentication operations, SSL is built into every Web browser and is therefore available to anybody using the Internet. The link for this article located at TechWeb is no longer available. . A tech company has unveiled a revolutionary security protocol, claiming to enhance web traffic protection by as much as ten times.. High-Performance Encryption, Web Traffic Security, SSL Technology. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A computer glitch is being blamed for cutting off Web traffic headed for Yahoo.com and Microsoft.com on Saturday. For about 12 hours, thousands of Internet users trying to visit those two popular Web sites and dozens of others were instead sent . . . . A computer glitch is being blamed for cutting off Web traffic headed for Yahoo.com and Microsoft.com on Saturday. For about 12 hours, thousands of Internet users trying to visit those two popular Web sites and dozens of others were instead sent to a Web page owned by MyDomains.com. The president of the Web hosting company, Richard Lau, said he was "a little bit in shock at the ease with which this has gotten out of control." He added that the episode proves a computer criminal could "easily" hijack all traffic on a part of the Internet. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . A technical malfunction is responsible for the disruption of online access to Google.com and Facebook.com, impacting individuals.. Web Traffic Hijack, Internet Disruption, Microsoft Issues, Yahoo Glitch. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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