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ONLINE May 2000 Greg R. Notess |
On the Net, Up and Coming Search Technologies Search technology is big business on the Net. The most highly visited sites often started off by helping people find something on the Web....  |
Salon.com May 30, 2000 Damien Cave |
Napster at law Attorney-turned-interim CEO Hank Barry promises to make money, not war, for the beleaguered music-swapping service.  |
Inc. May 15, 2000 Mike McCurry |
Bigger than TV Itself ...We asked Mike McCurry whether the Internet will drastically change politics, as television did...  |
Inc. May 15, 2000 Robert Putnam |
The Other Pin Drops ...We asked him how the Internet has affected our sense of community....  |
OCC Bulletin May 15, 2000 |
Infrastructure Threats -- Intrusion Risks This bulletin provides guidance to financial institutions on how to prevent, detect, and respond to intrusions into bank computer systems...  |
Search Engine Watch May 12, 2000 Danny Sullivan |
Pagejacking Complaint Involves High-Profile Sites A complaint has been filed with the US Federal Trade Commission involving the alleged theft of web pages from high profile sites such as Disney, CNET and the Discovery Channel.  |
PC World June 1, 2000 Daniel Tynan |
Privacy 2000: In Web We Trust? In the real world, nobody knows what TV commercials you watch or which sitcoms you surf. When you go strolling through the mall, no one's making note of the stores you visit or the clothes you try on. But on the Internet, Web sites are doing all of this and more. And that makes some people mad as hell.  |
PC World June 1, 2000 Matt Lake |
Privacy Special Report: Stealth Surfing All right already, we all know there's no privacy on the Web. Online intrusion is like the proverbial weather--everybody talks about it, but nobody ever seems to do anything about it.  |
Search Engine Watch May 3, 2000 |
Goodbye Domain Names, Hello RealNames? While the domain name system continues to devolve into a joke, the RealNames web addressing system is growing stronger....  |
D-Lib May 2000 Richard T. Kaser |
Brutal Honesty If Information Wants to Be Free . . . Then Who's Going to Pay for It?  |
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