News (60)

  • Notebooks, iPods banned on UK flights

    Air travellers leaving the United Kingdom on Thursday faced the strictest security measures in years: iPods, mobile phones, laptops, and even books and magazines were no longer permitted as carry-on items.

  • US army to deploy robots with machine guns

    Next year, the US Army will give robots machine guns, although humans will firmly be in control of them.

  • Youth radio hammered over World Trade Centre digital photo

    Digitally-enhanced photographs are becoming a popular feature of many consumer Web sites, with uses ranging from marketing and promotion to reader competitions. However, the use of a particularly sensitive image to promote a branding exercise for Australia's publicly-funded youth radio network has sparked outrage, fuelled by articles and polls run on some of the country's dominant news Web sites.

  • Down and out in Australia

    Do Australian companies really need a business continuity plan? ZDNet Australia finds out what all the talk is about in disaster recovery and continuity planning.

  • 'Tall poppy syndrome' cuts down Australia

    A panel of experts has told the ICT Outlook Forum that Australia's anti-entrepreneurial culture is holding it back.

Blogs (1)

  • Read the blog post - Ella Morton

    Dying for attention

    Why on Earth would anyone want to fake their own death online? For some people, it's an attention-seeking act. For others, it may seem the only way out of a sticky situation.

Features and Case Studies (5)

  • Down and out in Australia

    Do Australian companies really need a business continuity plan? ZDNet Australia finds out what all the talk is about in disaster recovery and continuity planning.

  • When disaster strikes

    Find out the simple steps to disaster recovery planning that can make the difference between corporate survival, and corporate decimation in times of crisis.

  • High availability: Keeping it up

    High availability is about getting your hardware, networks, software, policies, and people all working together smoothly.

  • Hack 2002: recognising the risks

    With over a trillion dollars in transactions passing over the Internet, the Hack 2002 Conference currently being held in Sydney attempts to expose some of the systemic flaws which lead to security breaches.

  • PGP creator: Surveillance must be curbed

    Phil Zimmermann, the creator of the Pretty Good Privacy encryption tool, says that widespread surveillance is leading us into an Orwellian future.

Reviews (2)

  • Microsoft's security chief gets serious

    Scott Charney's carreer has taken him from prosecutor in Bronx County to vice chairman of the President's Critical Infrastructure Protection Board. Now he's literally looking for trouble as Microsoft's chief security strategist.

  • Frequent fliers: The biometric guinea pigs

    Before he starts work every day, Oscar Carranza places his hand in a biometric scanner that traces the contours of his palm and compares them to digital records in the airport's central database.

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