Every year, more than 5,000 laptops are lost in taxis in London, New York, Chicago and other large cities. According to our research, in 2008 companies’ topmost security investment was laptop ...
I was looking into data encryption, since I got a new laptop and I am afraid of losing it, or it getting stolen. I want encryption so that if that does happen they can’t get my data, or make it ...
Case study: Swiss Re encrypts hard drives on 4,500 laptops Insurance giant Swiss Re is encrypting the hard disks on 4,500 laptops in a bid to boost security. The company - which occupies the famous ...
Hope it's not considered too OT in here but I'm hoping for a more "corporate" audience than I might get in the laptop forum. We're reviewing laptop suppliers, we currently use Dell but aren't smitten ...
The threat is a big one. An estimated 750,000 laptops were stolen last year, up from 600,000 in 2003, according to Absolute Software, a maker of tools to retrieve lost or stolen laptops. The threat of ...
Vancouver, Canada and Traverse City, Michigan: January 13, 2009 " Absolute Software Corporation and the Ponemon Institute today announced the findings of a new study on the use of encryption on ...
U.S. government agencies are scrambling to plug one of their biggest security holes: sensitive information — names, addresses and Social Security numbers, for example — stored on laptops, handhelds, ...
Now that the capacities of small form-factor drives have hit hundreds of gigabytes, just about any corporate database can easily fit on a laptop. That affordable capacity gives users the opportunity ...
Hitachi is set to begin volume shipment of the Travelstar 7K200, a 200G, 7200rpm, 2.5in SATA hard drive intended for notebooks. The optional Bulk Data Encryption feature allows in-drive encryption of ...
A new survey by laptop encryption company Alertsec indicates business leaders trust Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump over Democrat rival Hillary Clinton when it comesto important aspects ...
U.S. government agencies are scrambling to plug one of their biggest security holes. U.S. government agencies are scrambling to plug one of their biggest security holes: sensitive information — names, ...
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