FC Now: In Colleagues We Trust?
Grok Headline matches for FC Now: In Colleagues We Trust?
"Colleagues Tell On Fake WMD Reporter"
"Colleagues Tell On Fake WMD Reporter"
06/06/2004 09:59 PMRidge Tells Colleagues He May Retire
(AP)
Ridge Tells Colleagues He May Retire
(AP)
07/30/2004 03:28 AMAP - Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge is considering stepping
down after the November election, telling colleagues he is worn out
from the massive reorganization of government and needs to earn money
in the private sector to put his teenage children through college,
officials said.
Aggressive Emails From Colleagues
Dangerous To Your Health
Aggressive Emails From Colleagues
Dangerous To Your Health
01/08/2004 08:42 PMProbably not all that surprising, but a study has shown that
aggressive work
emails or emails from superiors are likely to increase blood
pressure. The worst offenders, of course, are those that combine
both conditions: the dreaded angry email from the boss. The study
suggests, then, that's counter-productive for bosses to vent their
anger in email to staff. The folks who performed the study suggest
that part of the problem is that the impersonal nature of email makes
people more willing to be particularly nasty in writing the emails.
Of course, what they didn't study is whether or not
sending
nasty emails is
beneficial to your health...
Bolton's Pressure on C.I.A. Analyst
Angered Colleagues
Bolton's Pressure on C.I.A. Analyst
Angered Colleagues
04/15/2005 08:32 PMAn attempt by John R. Bolton to remove a national intelligence officer
prompted the deputy director of the C.I.A. to intervene.
Shark Tank: Hey, if you can't trust IT,
who CAN you trust?
Shark Tank: Hey, if you can't trust IT,
who CAN you trust?
03/14/2005 05:10 PMCEO decides that his company is getting too much spam, so word comes
down to this pilot fish in IT: Find a better spam filter and get it
working pronto.
Shark Tank: Hey, if we can't trust them,
who CAN we trust?
Shark Tank: Hey, if we can't trust them,
who CAN we trust?
03/06/2004 01:53 AMSpurred on by new laws and regulations, this company is overhauling
its IT security -- and the security department wants to strip support
programmers of their access to the production system.
Kerry 'Unfit to be Commander-in-Chief',
Say Former Military Colleagues
Kerry 'Unfit to be Commander-in-Chief',
Say Former Military Colleagues
05/03/2004 12:09 PMdon't have good things to say about him .. Read the whole
article
cnsnews.com//ViewSpecialReports.asp?Page=%5CSpecialReports%5
Carchive%5C200405%5CSPE20040503a.html
track this
site | 4 links
Quattrone Guilty For Emailing Colleagues
To Destroy Files
Quattrone Guilty For Emailing Colleagues
To Destroy Files
05/03/2004 03:09 PMFrank Quattrone, the famed investment banker who was a star in taking
Silicon Valley companies public during the boom years,
has now been found guilty of obstruction of justice for his emails
to colleagues suggesting they destroy certain files concerning stock
allocation. While the documents may have been destroyed, that email
wasn't... once again showing how emails can come back to haunt people.
Has anyone done a study recently looking at just how many fraud cases
these days involve email evidence?
"Kerry 'Unfit to be Commander-in-Chief',
Say Former Military Colleagues --
05/03/2004"
"Kerry 'Unfit to be Commander-in-Chief',
Say Former Military Colleagues --
05/03/2004"
05/03/2004 03:25 PMKerry 'Unfit to be Commander-in-Chief',
Say Former Military Colleagues --
05/03/2004
Kerry 'Unfit to be Commander-in-Chief',
Say Former Military Colleagues --
05/03/2004
05/03/2004 08:55 PMcome out in public declaring him unfit to serve as President .. BAD
NEWS FOR THE KERRY
CAMPAIGN:
cnsnews.com//ViewSpecialReports.asp?Page=/SpecialReports/a
rchive/200405/SPE20040503a.html
track this
site | 5 links
""I
provided this to some USAID
colleagues working in Indonesia and
their heads nearly
exploded.""
""I
provided this to some USAID
colleagues working in Indonesia and
their heads nearly
exploded.""
01/03/2005 05:57 AMFired 'NYT' Foreign Correspondent
Angrily Denies Charges that She Sent
E-mails Reporting on the Sex Lives of
Colleagues to Their Wives, But Judith
Miller is Still There? 4/9
Fired 'NYT' Foreign Correspondent
Angrily Denies Charges that She Sent
E-mails Reporting on the Sex Lives of
Colleagues to Their Wives, But Judith
Miller is Still There? 4/9
04/11/2005 03:49 AMSome fun at the Times: .. Editor and Publisher ..
despedida
editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_
content_id=1000874602
track this
site | 3 links
"Depressed Annan close to quitting over
UN scandals
KOFI ANNAN, the United
Nations secretary-general, is said to be
struggling with depression and
considering his future. Colleagues have
reported concerns about Annan ahead of
an official report this week..."
"Depressed Annan close to quitting over
UN scandals
KOFI ANNAN, the United
Nations secretary-general, is said to be
struggling with depression and
considering his future. Colleagues have
reported concerns about Annan ahead of
an official report this week..."
03/27/2005 06:21 PMTrust me.
Trust me.
05/31/2004 03:31 PM
Bush campaign lies with unprecedented
frequency. Making history with unprecedented negativity.
We Only Have So Much Trust
We Only Have So Much Trust
05/05/2004 08:12 AMOffshoring: Companies guarding 'secret sauce':
Interesting situation: U.S. companies are willing to send grunt IT
work overseas, but not the intellectual property they worked so hard
to develop. It seems that they don't trust overseas companies to keep
their intellectual property safe.
Therein lies the dilemma for many technology executives confronting
the issue of offshore outsourcing: U.S. companies are increasingly
turning to other countries to reduce labor costs, but they must decide
how far they can go without risking security breaches, communication
lapses or operational breakdowns, when moving work thousands of miles
away overseas.
I still agree with how this guy handled the "offshore problem." He
figued out how much he would save by sending work offshore, then added
back how much it was worth to him to have someone on-site. He then
advertised a position at this (much less than market) rate. He was
deluged with applications.
Click here to comment on this entry
Trust us
Trust us
05/17/2004 07:24 AMDefending the administration's enemy-combatant policy, the Justice
Department told the Supreme Court that the U.S. doesn't torture
prisoners. Just hours later, the Abu Ghraib story broke. Did the U.S.
intentionally mislead the court?
When trust isn't enough
When trust isn't enough
03/23/2005 08:05 AMInternet expert K.C. Claffy talks about next-generation security
architectures.
Who do you trust?
Who do you trust?
04/14/2004 09:10 AMKevin Salwen points to Starbucks' report on how corporately
responsible it is. And, while I certainly would rather work for a
company that cares enough to issue such a report than the egregiously
selfish ad agency Kevin points to, the Starbucks report does raise a
question: Who do you trust any more? So, Starbucks does up a lovely
color brochure explaining just how good a world citizen it is. Kudos
for at least pretending to care. But how much of the report is BS? ...
Continued at Worthwhile......
In God We Trust
In God We Trust
08/03/2004 06:22 PM
In God We
Trust.
She doesn't trust me
She doesn't trust me
03/13/2003 10:26 AMSo my mom and some relatives left early this morning for
Charlottesville, Virginia. They go up there a few times...
The End of Trust?
The End of Trust?
03/19/2003 10:45 PMUsing Memory Errors to Attack a Virtual Machine
We present an experimental study showing that soft
memory errors can lead to serious security vulnerabilities
in Java and .NET virtual machines, or in any system that
relies on type-checking of untrusted programs as a protection
mechanism. Our attack works by sending to the JVM
a Java program that is designed so that almost any memory
error in its address space will allow it to take control
of the JVM. -- Sudhakar Govindavajhala, Andrew W. Appel
I've heard that it was possible to hack smartcards and similar devices
before by tampering with them, but I've never understood how it was
done until now. Apparently some security experts claim to have been
aware of this technique for many years.
"zeldman.dogs"
Don't Trust E-Voting? Too Bad
Don't Trust E-Voting? Too Bad
09/15/2004 03:01 PMOver in Maryland, where studies have shown that the e-voting machines
are not secure, the courts have decided that if you don't trust the
e-voting machines, that's your own damn problem. They
will
not allow people to ask for a paper ballot if they feel
uncomfortable using one of those electronic voting machines. The
court also found that the state had "done everything necessary" to
show the e-voting machines were accurate and secure. Apparently, they
have pretty low standards.
Do you trust this penguin?
Do you trust this penguin?
05/19/2004 02:52 AMIn Google we trust?
In Google we trust?
12/19/2004 03:00 PM
Dave Winer today points to Scott Rosenberg's excellent take on
Google's new library venture. Scott concludes:
The public has a big interest in making sure that no one business has
a chokehold on the flow of human knowledge. As long as Google's
amazing project puts more knowledge in more hands and heads, who could
object? But in this area, taking the long view is not just smart --
it's ethically essential. So as details of Google's project emerge, it
will be important not just to rely on Google's assurances but to keep
an eye out for public guarantees of access, freedom of expression and
limits to censorship. [Scott
Rosenberg]
I agree. That's one of the reasons, by the way, that the evolving
relationship between electronic texts and physical books fascinates me
so deeply. For the generation now coming of age, Google defines a sort
of continental shelf. Whatever is on that shelf is considered
accessible. Whatever isn't fades into the murky unfathomable depths.
But when we can beam the halogen light into those depths and search
them, we'll be reminded that -- whatever online access can or cannot
be offered now, and however long it takes to make complex and
sensitive adjustments to the copyright system -- the physical books
exist, and are available for our use.
...Perceptions of Trust
Perceptions of Trust
02/13/2004 01:27 PMInternet News Feb 13 2004 5:17PM GMT
Google and Trust
Google and Trust
07/18/2004 03:12 PMAs
Google nears the day when it
sells stock to the public, a fundamental question arises: How can the
company possibly justify the rich price it hopes to get in the
marketplace?
However brilliant Google's technology may be -- and it's both
innovative and path-breaking in many ways -- the online search and
advertising company doesn't have a monopoly. And it faces plenty of
competition from small and large businesses that have their own share
of smart people.
There's only one way the fast-growing search and media powerhouse
can pull this off, and a single word sums it up: trust.
More...
"How can I trust Firefox?"
"How can I trust Firefox?"
12/22/2004 01:31 AMCan't Trust This Telecommuter
Can't Trust This Telecommuter
09/13/2004 04:10 PMFor all the talk about how we're soon going to be a nation of
telecommuters, thanks to new technologies,
Broadband
Reports points out a study that shows one very big hurdle:
most employers still don't trust their employees to work
unsupervised. The study was done in Australia, so there's a
chance the results wouldn't apply elsewhere, but it does seem like
something that is likely to be a major hindering factor for many
potential telecommuting opportunities. Of course, it's not just the
bosses that don't trust telecommuters: 75% of employees think their
telecommuting co-workers are simply goofing off and "are not working
at all." At some point, however, someone is going to do a little
cost-benefit analysis and realize that office space is a pretty big
cost, and trusting your workers to actually do what you've asked them
to do could actually pay off. Of course, on the flip side, expect to
see many new technologies, applications and services to help solve
this problem by somehow "monitoring" the work of telecommuting
employees -- which is likely to make most workers only feel even less
trusted.
and when that trust is broken?
and when that trust is broken?
05/10/2004 10:01 AMThe government in the
Rumsfield v. Padilla case, as quoted in the
Times:
"[I]n situations where there is a war ... you have to trust the
executive to make the kind of quintessential military judgments that
are involved in things like that."
And when "the executive" breaches that trust? What then? If -- as this
"executive" believes -- there's no judicial review, then there's only
one review left: elections.
Lessons From the Value Trust
Lessons From the Value Trust
08/16/2004 12:07 PMLegg Mason's Mary Chris Gay shares the secrets to her investing
success.
Openness and Trust on the Web
Openness and Trust on the Web
08/13/2004 04:31 PMJD Lasica (Online Journalism Review): Transparency
Begets Trust in the Ever-Expanding Blogosphere. The openness of
Weblogs could help explain why many readers find them more credible
than traditional media. Can mainstream journalists learn from their
cutting-edge cousins?
A Redwood You Can Trust
A Redwood You Can Trust
08/06/2004 11:23 AMWhat makes this REIT so shareholder-friendly?
Wiki of Trust
Wiki of Trust
03/13/2003 10:21 AMI had a question for those who use and promote wikis. But then, I just
did a search for “trust”...
Can You Trust Your Web Host?
Can You Trust Your Web Host?
01/14/2003 06:19 AMIt is the nagging question that confronts all webmasters from
time-to-time, "can I trust my host with my private data"? Here's one
webmasters shocking story.
Mostly an issue of trust
Mostly an issue of trust
05/17/2004 04:16 AMJohnny Carson's first national TV gig was as host (from 1957 to 1962)
of a game show called "Who Do You Trust?" It was patterned after the
earlier Groucho Marx show called "You Bet Your Life." I was reminded
of this show during a lively e-mail discussion with a number of
readers of my Identity Management newsletter about various identity
federation schemes that required your identity data to be stored with
third parties.
How Can I Trust Firefox?
How Can I Trust Firefox?
12/22/2004 01:40 AMSlashdot Dec 21 2004 3:37AM GMT
"All Trust the Internet"
"All Trust the Internet"
05/27/2004 12:13 AMOn a Mission: The New Internet Mission
"According to Nielsen, there are 31 million moms online. They're
38, tend to be married, are very smart -- college educated -- and are
working moms. Moms forever have been key decision makers. What's
interesting is how that translates to the Internet.
You have to be where they are online. In 2004, moms told us that
they're spending more time online than watching television.... We did
a lot of focus groups with moms. It's one of those time-saving
devices. It simplifies their life, and that's what they're looking for
when they turn to the Internet....
We arrived at four distinct segments: the Tech Nester, Mrs. Net
Skeptic, the Yes Mom, and Passive Under Pressure. We got rid of that
last segment because she's passive and a newbie, but we still ended up
with 77% of Internet moms....
When we started really digging into the segments, we found that
their similarities are more interesting than their differences. They
were all after the same basic things. They want to simplify their
lives. All trust the Internet. The Internet is where they turn to
first. You don't have to have separate strategies to address each
segment....
They all want information. They think the Internet is the most
useful medium for accessing information. And as a source of
entertainment, it came in number two. As it did for spending time with
their kids. They've come to rely on the Internet. 84% said they would
miss the Internet the most if it went away. It's the same with kids
and teens." [Fast Company
Now, via Lost
Remote]
Although this article and the study are aimed more at marketers,
it's interesting to read the results in the context of libraries. The
need to do research, the desire for making life simpler, and the
misguided trust of all things internet... how are libraries fitting
into these womens' lives? Are they? There are whole trust circles
online where libraries are nowhere to be found. How do we get
there?
Trust Me, I'm a Machine
Trust Me, I'm a Machine
04/07/2005 02:54 AMAn EU computer science project hopes to make the uncertainty attached
to the pervasive computing future a lot more secure through
establishing trust. [PRWEB Apr 7, 2005]
Should You Trust MAPS?
Should You Trust MAPS?
04/06/2005 05:24 PMGrok Description matches for FC Now: In Colleagues We Trust?
GrokA matches for FC Now: In Colleagues We Trust?
FC Now: In Colleagues We Trust?