Security takes an OATH Video
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VeriSign: The Internet utility everyone plugs into?
In an exclusive Face to Face interview with ZDNet Editor in Chief Dan Farber, VeriSign CEO Stratton Sclavos outlines his strategy to have at least half of all voice and data network interactions passing through his company's services by 2010.
Speaking at a San Francisco conference on Wednesday, Sun CEO Scott McNealy described today as the "Participation Age" in technology, saying Sun's open-source approach fits with that direction.
Cisco on security: It's a network thing
At RSA Conference 2005 in San Francisco, Cisco CEO John Chambers speaks to an audience about the importance of the network in dealing with security threats.
Symantec gets ready to take on Microsoft
At RSA Conference 2005 in San Francisco, Symantec CEO John Thompson knocks Microsoft's security efforts and says the upcoming merger with Veritas Software will provide businesses with an optimal product for corporate compliance.
Flash drive gets biometric protection
ZDNet's David Berlind looks at the ClipDrive, a portable flash-based device that offers built-in fingerprint authentication, designed to secure sensitive files on the go.
At RSA Conference 2005 in San Francisco, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates and Zachary Gutt, a product manager in the business security unit, demonstrate SpyNet, an anti-spyware database created by collecting real-time alerts from computer users.
Sun's CEO says Internet is future
CEO Jonathan Schwartz tells the Sun analyst conference in San Francisco that users want all their services and data on the network. That, he says, will increase the need for back-end hardware and applications.
Zuckerberg launches Facebook Connect
At this week's F8 08 conference in San Francisco, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg explains how changes in the social-networking company's platform will benefit developers, as well as users.
Raw perrero dancing in 100% authentic Cuban Style!
The real costs of going offshore
"Offshoring" is the term du jour, but the process it describes is complicated and riddled with pitfalls. At the SandHill Group's Software 2004 conference in San Francisco, a panel of senior executives share their experiences and warn that the total costs of ownership can be higher than expected.
