Slashdot Mirror


User: PK073912_CSNB514

PK073912_CSNB514's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
3
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 3

  1. budget... on Businesses Spend 20% of IT Budgets on Security · · Score: 1

    Now days internet become as an important part on the human life. everything is done by using internet and many companies do their business by using internet to market their products and services. every year.. every month and every days the business in internet are increasing.. and.. also the cybercrime... therefore the companies need to pay attention more about their security by find out the best solution to defend themselves from attacker or intruders.. as the result they need to spend more budget to get good security. the question is.. if the cost of cybercrime is increasing, are companies budgeting enough to defend themselves?:) here has an article about this topic.. http://www.darkreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=133814

  2. Simple ways!! on Online Videos May Conduct Viruses · · Score: 1

    The simple ways to prevent pc from get virus is NO DOWNLOAD + NO PIRACY = NO VIRUS!! Get the original video from original CD/DVD.. ;p Easy and safe!! Isn't it? :)

  3. Re:They don't have to be on Online Videos May Conduct Viruses · · Score: 1

    Actually it would be much, much easier to design a system that just exposed the URL for a standard video file. The user/browser could then either download it, or have a plugin that buffers and displays it inside the browser. This eliminates all kinds of problems both for the web developers and the user. But, of course, the real reason for using Flash-based players is that it acts as a weak form of DRM. The intention is to force the user to watch the video only at the site (with ads, etc.), and to not allow the user to take the video, transfer it elsewhere (e.g. iPod), edit out commercials, redistribute it, etc. Of course, we all know that it is possible to write a script that extracts the video... but it becomes a tiresome arms race. This is just another example of the fundamental tradeoff between the notion of "convenience" (for the user) and "control" (for the distributor). The user wants freedom. The distributor wants DRM. i agree.. ;)