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Rise of the next-generation firewall
b>KUALA LUMPUR/b>: Social networks and other Web 2.0 technologies are ways for hackers to penetrate enterprise systems because Facebook pages, instant messaging and the such are closely intertwined with business networks.
Carmakers jump into in-vehicle app boom
FUTURISTIC electric vehicle maker Tesla has confirmed that its new sedan will support third party apps in the same manner as a smartphone.
The Times gets tough
b>NEW YORK:/bi>The New York Times /i>will try to make it more difficult to use Internet search engines to avoid paying for frequent visits to the newspaper's website.
NY Times begins charging for digital access
b>NEW YORK/b>: i>The New York Times/ibegan charging on Monday for full access to its website and mobile services.
Get more with less
TELCOS and Internet service providers (ISPs) are having a hard time keeping up with the amount of data traffic that's increasing every day, thanks to YouTube, peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing and the proliferation of social networking sites.
Japan disaster sparks social media innovation
b>TOKYO/b>: As Japan grapples with an unprecedented triple disaster - earthquake, tsunami, nuclear crisis - the Web has spawned creativity and innovation online amid a collective desire to ease suffering.
Google profile in China shrinking
b>BEIJING/b>: A year after a public spat with Beijing over censorship, Google Inc says its business with Chinese advertisers is growing even as the Internet giant's share of online searches in China plunges.
Planned wireless Internet network threatens GPS
b>WASHINGTON:/bA new, ultra-fast wireless Internet network is threatening to overpower GPS signals across the United States and interfere with everything from airplanes to police cars to consumer navigation devices.
Facebook looks to strengthen media partnership
b>SAN DIEGO:/bFacebook is looking to strengthen its relationship with the news media and has already helped boost traffic to news websites, a top executive told journalists.
IBM training computers to predict traffic
b>SAN FRANCISCO/b>: Traffic websites, with their colour-coded maps of clogged streets and freeways, are good at telling commuters when congestion is already awful. But what if they could know not only where you drive, but if the route is going to be bad today, and warned you ahead of time?