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Microsoft, Symantec and insecurity
Symantec's CEO sounds determined but cautious, and Microsoft could use a win or two in the face of Wall Street. In this week's CNET News.com Reporter Roundtable, Harry Fuller, Joris Evers, Robert Vamosi and Ina Fried look at what the two software giants are up to and what the week ahead may hold.
After his keynote at Gartner Symposium ITxpo 2006 in San Francisco on May 17, Thompson spoke with CNET News.com reporter Joris Evers about the price of security software and Microsoft's entry into the security competition.
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
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.
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
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.
Security Bites: Microsoft in zero-day mire
Microsoft can't swat new bugs as fast as they pop up. The software giant has rushed out a "critical" fix for Windows, but attacks continue via other known, yet-to-be-plugged holes. Moreover, exploit code for two new flaws has surfaced. CNET News.com's Joris Evers and CNET.com's Robert Vamosi give their take on this week's Security Bites.
Reporter Roundtable: Lenovo and the China card
Is Lenovo a potential information security risk because of the Chinese government's part ownership in the PC maker? That's what an influential Congressman says, and he forced the U.S. State Department to back down over the issue. Join CNET News.com's Reporter Roundtable with Charles Cooper, Harry Fuller, Tom Krazit and Joris Evers for a behind-the-scenes discussion of what happens next.
Anand Chandrasekher, senior vice president and general manager of Intel's sales and marketing group, says they're pleased with the start of their cell phone chip business. With CNET News.com's Michael Kanellos, he talks about what's happened this year.\r\n
InCard Technologies has developed technology that can turn a credit card into a device that generates passwords for one-time use, for example for stronger authentication when banking online. CNET News.com's Joris Evers takes a look.
