CNET News Roundtable: Now a videocast Video
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Does privacy still exist in the Internet age?
After this week's big security flub at AOL, the answer to the privacy question is a lot less clear. Tune in to a discussion between Elinor Mills, Declan McCullagh and Charlie Cooper on this week's edition of the CNET News.com Reporters' Roundtable.
CNET News.com reporter roundtable
Kari Dean McCarthy interviews editors and reporters Charlie Cooper, Harry Fuller, Declan McCullagh about how the technology industry's biggest players have shifted from avoidance to assertion in Washington's lobbyist game.\r\n
CNET News.com's Joris Evers and CNET's Robert Vamosi discuss Windows pests coming to Macs, the endless stream of IE flaws, McAfee's purchase of SiteAdvisor, why phishing works and Microsoft's upcoming Patch Tuesday.
Burning Man: What's the fascination for Silicon Valley?
In 1986, on a San Francisco beach, about 20 participants got together to burn an 8-foot structure of a man, and thus was born Burning Man. Twenty years later, the festival, which now takes place in the northern Nevada desert, is expected to attract some 35,000 people when it takes place next week. For some reason, Burning Man has occupied a special place in the hearts of techies. Join CNET News.com Charlie Cooper as he looks at why with Burning Man veterans Jennifer Guevin, Elinor Mills and Declan McCullagh during this week's edition of the CNET News.com Reporters' roundtable.\r\n\r\n
Burning Man video footage courtesy of www.dramainthedesert.com.
CNET News.com's Joris Evers and CNET's Robert Vamosi give their take on hackers who use DNS to attack, IE vulnerabilities, bots that boost online stores' trust ratings and more.
CNET News.com's Joris Evers and CNET's Robert Vamosi talk about rootkits in Bagle variants, new efforts to fight phishing, unofficial patches for IE flaws and wager on whether Microsoft will issue a patch early.
CNET News.com's Joris Evers and CNET's Robert Vamosi give their take on hackers who use DNS to attack, IE vulnerabilities, bots that boost online stores' trust ratings and more.\r\n
Even if Internet users can tell a real site from a fake one, they're not safe, as phishers now try to trick people into sharing personal information over the phone. Also, more browser bugs, and security as a "killer app" for Intel hardware. Join Joris Evers and Robert Vamosi for CNET's weekly Security Bites.\r\n
Security Bites' first weekly videocast
CNET News.com's Joris Evers and CNET's Robert Vamosi give their take on RFID viruses, Vista vs. spyware, Symantec's unhappy surprise for AOL users and a second patch for the Apple OS.\r\n
From Yahoo to pretexting--what's up?
This week there was a major shuffle at the top and in the structure of Yahoo. What does this mean? Where is this company headed? We talk with CNET News.com's Elinor Mills and Jim Kerstetter. Meanwhile, the U.S. Senate may move against pretexting. This follows Hewlett-Packard's civil settlement with the California Attorney General's Office involving the use of pretexting that targeted reporters, board members and employees. News.com's Declan McCullagh sorts through this issue.
