Experian challenged over massive data leak in Brazil
Consumer rights body criticizes explanations from the credit bureau in relation to the data exposure of over 220 million citizens.
Consumer rights body criticizes explanations from the credit bureau in relation to the data exposure of over 220 million citizens.
What are the most common, and serious, database vulnerabilities that businesses should be aware of?
Grafana Labs sets the bar for open source observability with Grafana 7.0: more developer friendly, more data sources, data transformation, and growth in the cloud and on premise
GraphQL was never conceived as a query language for databases. Yet, it's increasingly being used for this purpose. Here's why, and how.
Members of the Armed Forces form the majority of the board of the body responsible for enforcing the data protection rules.
RocksDB is the secret sauce underlying many data management systems. Speedb is a drop-in replacement for RocksDB that offers a significant boost in performance and now powers Redis on Flash.
Microsoft has released a second free service pack -- a large, recommended update -- for its popular SQL Server 2005 database application. The update makes SQL Server 2005 compatible with Microsoft's new Windows Vista operating system and Office 2007 suite, and adds a number of data compression, manageability and interoperability enhancements.
Having GE behind the solution is not as big a deal as the GPhone, but it could have a similar impact in the imaging market. It means a major vendor is pushing a standards-based solution in a world dominated by proprietary offerings.
At the RSA Conference in San Francisco, CNET's Brian Cooley sees the latest HP technology available to keep personal identification numbers private using new encryption and printing systems.
Printer manufacturer Lexmark on Wednesday teamed up with Dataline, a Magnetic Ink Character Recognition specialist, to help companies automatically recognise fraudulent documents and more easily organise their financial paperworkThe earliest Magnetic Ink Character Recognition (MICR) systems were installed in the 1950s by banks and other financial institutions but Lexmark said smaller companies will now have access to the same technology at a fraction of the cost.