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PC World March 2002 Scott Spanbauer |
Get That Spyware Off My Computer! Prevent spyware from installing on your PC, remove spyware already installed, and switch browsers at will...  |
PC World March 2002 Stephen Manes |
Tech Companies to You, 'Hello, Sucker!' The worst marketers treat users like lower forms of life...  |
PC World March 2002 Andrew Brandt |
Stopping the Snoops Within Your Software After baiting you with free services, some software reveals your information to its makers...  |
Salon.com February 4, 2002 Barak Jolish |
The encrypted jihad We can't stop terrorists from using uncrackable codes. So we shouldn't even try...  |
CIO February 1, 2002 Sarah D. Scalet |
A Little Knowledge Deemed a Dangerous Thing In more innocent times, public agencies that wanted to shine made information -- lots of it -- available on their websites. That all changed on Sept. 11, as jittery CIOs across the country considered how information could be misused, and adjusted their websites accordingly...  |
Information Today February 2002 Richard Poynder |
Paying the Price for Security Information technology and the Internet -- so the mantra goes -- offer significant cost savings, efficiency improvements, and substantial social benefits. Such assumptions, however, are increasingly being questioned...  |
Information Today February 2002 Shirley Duglin Kennedy |
Spam I Am! The proliferation of junk e-mail...  |
Searcher February 2002 Carol Ebbinghouse |
Not All Laws Are Free: The Importance of the Veeck Case When it comes to legal issues, an erroneous assumption older than the Internet appears: The text of all laws is free of copyright and may be copied and/or distributed freely...  |
PC World January 28, 2002 Ellen Messmer |
'My Party' E-Mail Virus Hides as URL Antivirus vendors urge update to protect against sneaky virus, which could open PCs to intruders...  |
Salon.com January 22, 2002 Katharine Mieszkowski |
Relics of the lost bulletin-board tribes Text files preserve some of the vivacity of old-fashioned online conversation. Will Web-based discussions vanish from the historical record?  |
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