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iPod: Your Portable Corporate Hellraiser

MrAndrews writes "In an article on ZDNet UK, a Gartner says that "Companies should consider banning portable storage devices such as Apple's iPod from corporate networks as they can be used to introduce malware or steal corporate data" I recently came into contact with a similar policy at a consulting firm that was concerned that top-secret information might escape through my USB watch, and made me leave it at the front desk every day. In that case, I know it was absurd overkill ... but is this concern a legitimate concern? No more music on the way into the office?"

2 of 679 comments (clear)

  1. Re:you're in the US, yes? by YankeeInExile · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Maybe Charlton Heston would balk, but the FAA did not. Federal Air Marshall Program

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  2. 5.56mm bullets don't usually overpenetrate. by caveat · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    The .223 has been gaining popularity with LE over the years due to the development of frangible bullets - they still pack enough kinetic energy to slice through body armor, which is one of the primary reasons for choosing a 5.56 instead of a 9mm, but once the bullet hits a 'resistant' material like flesh or a wall, it disintegrates into small, harmless pieces. Anecdotal evidence from tactical entry situations that even NATO M855 ball ammo (62gr steel-core) doesn't tend to overpenetrate - the bullet is traveling so fast and is so hydrodynamically unstable that it tumbles and snaps in two after about 10cm of travel through flesh.

    Now, in Europe (or at least Geneva), where the army d00dz have H&K 7.62mm battle rifles, the overpenetration issue is legitimate - a 168gr 308 bullet will blow right through a man like a hot knife through butter,.

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