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Cyber Wars

July 22nd, 2010 Dave No comments

Onto my next book.  Since my last post, I have read a few books, but am in the middle of a interesting read name “Cyber Wars” by Richard A. Clarke who has an extensive background in Government IT.  This, coupled with the recent “Top Secret America” Washington Post expose has led me to believe that we are reaching the boiling point of interest on these converging subjects.

Cyber Wars details the history of Cyber attacks launched by suspected nation states, details the various international (formal and informal) hacking rings, and discusses openly how software, hardware, and infrastructure vulnerabilities may lead to some serious trouble.  Clarke offers some opinions on why the US is ahead on ‘cyber-offense’ but way behind on ‘cyber-defenses’ particularly because American civilization has become so reliant on our technology – EVERYTHING is connected to the internet, and that is the root of our security challenge.

What to do?  Unplug everything?  Disable all broadband access?  Create a China-like “great Firewall”?  I don’t think the majority will trade convenience for security, which is ultimately the sacrifice we all make.  How often do we just click “Yes” to any/all system screens?  Clicking Yes to changing in Terms and Conditions, Privacy changes, etc. without at least scanning the material is perilous risk that people take.

Cybersecurity on the government scale is still taking shape.  Gen. Alexander earned a 4th star on his way to taking the new CYBERCOM command, but overall, the US seems to be reluctant to sign up for protecting private industry, at least that is the public stance.  Cost and politics aside, citizens must be more aware of the digital footprints we leave behind.   most of us at least shred our bank documents before thrashing them – we all should do the same when banking online too.  Clicking the ‘Log-out’ button reduces the chance of a “man in the middle” attack by shredding (digitally) your user session.  Simple steps like these will greatly lead to a more knowledgeable and secure digital nation.

Here is a Topic Block to more information:

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Popularity: 14% [?]

Wikinomics – How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything

March 26th, 2009 Dave No comments

After reading WIkinomics, I decided its time to get back to blogging about tech again.  Wikinomics is a book that we can all learn something from.   The book describes the trend of mass collaboration and how the tools or “Weapons of Mass Collaboration” are allowing companies to innovate faster, cheaper, and better.  Wikinomics teaches us that the open source model is not the taboo that once was, but an economical alternative to the vendor lock in that the large software houses seek to impose on fat enterprise budgets (read Microsoft, Oracle, SAP).

Companies and the Government are awaking to see that enterprise software doesnt always have to be a $10 million compromise of the IT budget and for good reason.  Many times, the functionality required for a project can be discovered and implemented using an existing Open Source platform.

WIkinomics describes how systems that were built with Peer Production or “Pro-sumer” input has created vibrant user driven communities that surpass the technical support you would pay for from a “big 3″ vendor (MS, ORACLE, SAP).

The bottom line?  Software should not be a top heavy budget item.  With the proper assistance, companies and government agencies can successfully adopt open source platforms and dramatically increase their ROI.

You can buy the book here: http://www.amazon.com/Wikinomics-Mass-Collaboration-Changes-Everything/dp/1591841933/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1207324794&sr=8-1

Popularity: 16% [?]

Welcome to IRT Consulting

January 7th, 2009 Dave 1 comment

Goodby 2008, hello 2009.  This will be my new place to expose my thoughts and discoveries Web 2.0-3.0, Open Source Tech (LAMP), and other musings as necessary.  I will welcome all comments and suggestions.

This first post is the result of launching into WordPress, quite possibly the best invention since GoogleMaps.  I am looking forward to empowering businesses through internet technologies.   After working with Joomla, I do believe that WordPress is smoother thus far…

Popularity: 34% [?]