home contact keylogger.org add keylogger.org to favorites set keylogger.org as homepage Anti-Keylogger.org
Keylogger testing and reviews

Keylogger testing policy

Press-releases

Keylogger developers

Links
Monitoring Software Keylogger articles

Get Free Software

Keylogger chat

Keylogger forum

Sponsorship & services
Advertising
Your Ad Here
Site News
Current section

June 24, 2008

New version of All In One Keylogger added

Free monitoring and anti-keylogging Software!

World news

July 03, 2008

Information Security Management: The Basics

Industry View: Web Application Security Today - Are We All Insane?

Ignore Malware? Some Leaders Imply Yes

Chinese bloggers evade great firewall

HMRC blunder leads to further private data leak

Reports reveal poor security practices behind data losses

Thieves steal millions from Citibank customers

Trojans stop play for web gamers

Google open sources RatProxy security tool

IBM Develops Audio-masking Technology

ATO admits callers are 'chopped off'

E-security review to probe broadband network

Stolen: Google's employee records

Microsoft trumpets security additions in upcoming IE8

Mozilla patches 13 bugs in Firefox 2

Newsletter
E-mail: 
Subscribe
Send to friend
E-mail: 
Send
Voting

We are planning to redesign our site. We would like You to express your opinion in this respect. Would you like to leave the site as it is? What changes would you like to suggest?

Yes, I like the site as it is.
It's ok, but some changes are necessary.
It should be changed completely.
VotingView results
DISCLAIMER: Logging other people's keystrokes or breaking into other people's computer without their permission can be considered illegal by the courts of many countries. The monitoring software reviewed here is ONLY for authorized system administrators and/or owners of computers. We assume no liability and are not responsible for any misuse or damage caused by the keylogging software. The end user of this software is obliged to obey all applicable local, state, federal and other laws in his country of residence.

May 07, 2008

ISPs, Web sites must tackle piracy, says Viacom chief

Internet service providers, Web site operators and manufacturers of devices that are used by some to pirate content should play a part in stamping out that piracy, said Sumner Redstone, chairman and controlling shareholder of both media company Viacom International Inc. and CBS Corp.

"It is obviously impossible to check every computer or look over the shoulder of every user around the world to see whether they have a license to use our content, and we don't want to do that," said Redstone in a keynote address today to the Seoul Digital Forum, which was monitored by webcast in Tokyo. "So solutions turn on enlisting the aggregators -- ISPs, device manufacturers, hosting companies and site operators -- in this effort. We're not asking for perfection. But we do ask that companies that become aware of piracy using their facilities, do something about it."

Redstone, who was on his first visit to South Korea, spent about one third of his keynote address speaking about piracy and the damage it does to companies like his own.

"When you can instantly and easily download a high-quality, feature length film for free, with no repercussions, the incentive to purchase it quickly evaporates," he said. "If this sort of theft is allowed to continue unabated, the incentive to create programming will disappear."

While battling piracy, content providers need to forge on into new media markets and use new distribution methods to reach consumers, he said.

"Media companies, in turn, need to make it easy for consumers to obtain our content in a legal manner," Redstone said. "We cannot let the lack of perfect antipiracy tools keep us from forging ahead in providing the best, most innovative, creative content to the consumer over whatever medium they prefer ... whenever and wherever they prefer it."

Content providers like Redstone's CBS and Viacom have been battling online piracy of movies and TV shows for several years.

First efforts involved a string of high-profile lawsuits against individual Internet users, but with so many people participating in file sharing and other forms of piracy, the target of actions switched to site operators.

YouTube has been a major focus, and a chorus of complaints from TV stations and movie companies pushed the Google-owned site to introduce a watermarking system that seeks to block copyrighted material from being uploaded.

"They cannot get away with stealing our product," Redstone said of YouTube. "We cannot tolerate any form of piracy by anyone, including YouTube." Viacom is suing YouTube and its parent company, Google Inc., for more than $1 billion, claiming the companies are infringing on Viacom's copyrights.

But getting ISPs to monitor and filter traffic of their users has traditionally been difficult. Most keep their hands off packets traveling through their networks and devices arguing that they are conduits and not responsible for the actions of their users. Today, many ISPs in the U.S. will act on copyright complaints but only after a claim has been made under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

Redstone also called on regulators the world over to ensure copyrights are protected and infringements are punished.

In some nations, the tide is turning against piracy, thanks to new laws, he said, which were introduced not to help Hollywood but to prevent damage to emerging local content industries.

"The good news is: I am increasingly preaching to the converted in piracy-prone markets around the world," he said. "Governments in China and India are starting to take an active interest in enforcing copyright, if only to protect their own homegrown content."


Source: Computerworld




All news for July 03, 2008:
14:06Information Security Management: The Basics
14:06Industry View: Web Application Security Today - Are We All Insane?
14:04Ignore Malware? Some Leaders Imply Yes
14:02Chinese bloggers evade great firewall
13:01HMRC blunder leads to further private data leak
12:54Reports reveal poor security practices behind data losses
12:53Thieves steal millions from Citibank customers
12:51Trojans stop play for web gamers
12:50Google open sources RatProxy security tool
12:48IBM Develops Audio-masking Technology
12:40ATO admits callers are 'chopped off'
12:39E-security review to probe broadband network
12:37Stolen: Google's employee records
12:33Microsoft trumpets security additions in upcoming IE8
12:32Mozilla patches 13 bugs in Firefox 2

All news for July 02, 2008:
16:50Start-up nexTier debuts data-leak prevention appliance
16:49ACLU, EFF sue US gov't over mobile phone tracking
16:47UK scientists demo graphic passwords
16:46SecureWorks unmasks the Coreflood Trojan
16:45Web threats hit 12-month high
16:43Malware growth slowing, say experts
16:42World of Warcraft Trojan spreads from Asia
16:42Hackers hit Sony PS3 website
16:41SMEs failing at IT security
16:37Hacking Tools: A New Version of BackTrack Helps Ethical Hackers
16:36Hands On: 12 Quick Hacks for Firefox 3
16:35Swedish Data Inspection Protects Messy Apartment Dwellers
16:06DIAC security threatened by flood of contractors
16:02Lords questions gov't over web-data retention laws
16:00Barclays gives online users free Kaspersky software
16:00Report: Outdated browsers put 637m users at risk
15:57Trojan lurks, waiting to steal admin passwords
15:57Unstructured data at risk in most firms, survey finds
15:55Microsoft scrutinizes WSUS patch snafu
15:53Apple OS update fixes Adobe corruption bug



All news for July, 2008
All news for 2008 year
All news for 2007 year
All news for 2006 year
All news for 2005 year
All news for 2004 year


DONATION: Keylogger.org is an independent research project supported by a team of enthusiasts. If you find this project useful or would like to help foster its continued development please consider making a donation using PayPal`s online secure payment service.

A PayPal account is not required. All major credit cards are accepted (MasterCard/Eurocard, Visa/Delta/Electron, American Express, Switch/Maestro, Solo). Simply click the button below.

Any amount would be useful and appreciated!

Thanks in advance for your support!

Advertising
Your Ad Here
| home | testing and reviews | testing policy | press_releases | developers |

| articles | contest | chat | forum | sponsorship & services | contacts | links |
Copyright © 2003-2008, Keylogger.Org Team. All Rights Reserved.
Use of any information from this website is permitted only with hypertext link to www.keylogger.org.