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Geocities Rebuffs Trojan Horse
- A relatively benign Trojan horse is spreading on Internet Relay Chat channels. Once installed, the program opens a backdoor to the infected machine. By Michael Stutz. [Wired News]
Getting Ahead of the Elliptic Curve
- 3Com jumps on board with Certicom's ECC, a challenger to RSA's cryptography hegemony. Meanwhile, RSA is making ECC moves itself - kind of. [Wired News]
Getting Some Alien Experience
- A research group wants help collecting and analyzing data that could contain otherworldly conversations. Are you game? By Jennifer Sullivan. [Wired News]
Getting to the Bottom of 'Cyber Attacks'
- "The Pentagon is under cyber attack!" Big deal, say security experts who smell a political agenda at the heart of Wednesday's alarmist announcements. [Wired News]
Give Me MySpace
- A new, Windows-independent utility wants to stake out screen real estate beyond the borders of the desktop. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
Giving 3-D Objects a Dose of Reality
- University of Florida researchers have developed a modeling language designed to give VRML objects more realistic, dynamic behaviors. [Wired News]
Glitch Snows Weather Satellite
- Unknown technical problems brought down a satellite feeding weather data to the eastern United States, and a hurricane looms. Still, it appears the backup plan is working. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
Gotta Pay to Push?
- A small online software delivery company has received a patent for a variety of "push" technologies. Will Microsoft, Marimba, Pointcast, and other developers now have to pay to push? By James Glave. [Wired News]
Graphics the Web Way
- The Web changed imaging processing, so Macromedia made a new image processor. With Fireworks, the company hopes it has staked out a new product category. [Wired News]
Grocery Checkout Goes Self-Serve
- Ever worry about paying an unspoken surcharge because of grocery store scanners? If so - and you might well have cause - then a new self-service checkout system may be the answer. [Wired News]
Group Out to Set A New Standard
- Designers in the Web Standards Project have a message for Netscape and Microsoft: By not sticking to standards, you cost us tens of thousands of dollars each year. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
Grove Keeping Intel in the Chips
- The chip-maker's leader has seen the future and dubbed it P6: The latest architecture from the Intel runs everything from home computers to sophisticated servers. [Wired News]
HDML, Take Two
- Wired News reports on WAP's origins.
HP Makes E-Shopper Guarantees
- Shopping 'til your packets drop? HP's new "Web Quality of Service" strategy lavishes special traffic handling on preferred shoppers and business customers. [Wired News]
HP Wins Strong Encryption Export Approval
- By establishing a system that keeps encryption products in line with changing national crypto policies, Hewlett-Packard has won a license from the US government to export a special hardware-based, strong encryption technology. [Wired News]
HP's Export Plan: Freedom by Constraint
- Hewlett-Packard's workaround to get strong encryption technology on foreign shores may be too tricky for its own good. [Wired News]
HTML Writers Guild Joins W3C
- For the first time, independent Web designers will have a voice in the future direction of Web technologies that they would work with every day. [Wired News]
Hacker Raises Stakes in DOD Attacks
- Analyzer, the self-professed mentor and teacher of two teens accused of hacking US government servers, said he still has access to more than 400 Defense Department machines. [Wired News]
Hacker Raises Stakes in DOD Attacks
- Analyzer, the self-professed mentor and teacher of two teens accused of hacking US government servers, said he still has access to more than 400 Defense Department machines. [Wired News]
Hackers: We Fight Pedophiles, Not Pentagon
- Two of the three teens implicated in recent attacks on military networks are members of a global hacking and security collective called Enforcers. Now the group has come forward with its own version of the "cyberwar" saga. [Wired News]
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