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Tuesday, 19 June 2007 |

Pacific LANWorks Pte Ltd is proud to announce that we are awarded the authorized reseller and affiliate partner of Carbonite, the unlimited offsite backup solution for big corporation down to individual home-users, at a price as low as only USD5 per month. Did we mention unlimited size !!
Carbonite was founded in 2005 in order to provide Internet-based Backup for Everyone™. Although data loss is a very common problem, few people backup their PCs: existing methods of backup are tedious, time consuming and often too expensive. Furthermore, most don’t provide protection against PC theft, damage and natural disasters.
At Carbonite, PC users shouldn’t have to think about backup. The mission is to provide an inexpensive, reliable and truly easy-to-use solution for the mainstream PC user; one that is simple, safe and always on™.
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Tuesday, 05 June 2007 |
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Google has acquired another medium for its advertising engine by purchasing FeedBurner, a company that distributes syndicated content for blogs and other media Web sites, the companies said Friday.
Terms of the deal were not disclosed, although the figure of $100 million had been reported by TechCrunch, which broke the story last week.
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Tuesday, 05 June 2007 |
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Alleged spam mogul Robert Alan Soloway was arrested on Wednesday after being indicted by a federal grand jury.
The man the Washington State Office of the Attorney General has dubbed the Seattle Spammer was given an August 6 trial, during which he is set to face 35 charges related to suspected fraudulent Internet activities.
Soloway, owner of Newport Internet Marketing, was indicted by a federal grand jury on May 23 in a U.S. District Court in Seattle on 10 counts of mail fraud, 5 counts of wire fraud, 2 counts of e-mail fraud, 5 counts of aggravated identity theft and 13 counts of money laundering.
Soloway pleaded not guilty to all charges on Wednesday at his arraignment, according to court documents.
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Saturday, 26 May 2007 |
A Symantec antivirus signature update mistakenly quarantined two critical system files in the Simplified Chinese version of Windows XP last week, crippling PCs throughout China.
According to the Chinese Internet Security Response Team (CISRT), users of Norton Antivirus, Norton Internet Security 2007 and Norton 360 who installed an antivirus signature update released by Symantec on May 17 could not reboot their PCs. The update reportedly mistook two Windows system files--"netapi32.dll" and "lsasrv.dll"--as the Backdoor.Haxdoo Trojan horse. The two files were subsequently quarantined.
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Friday, 18 May 2007 |
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What are the dangers from running a pirated copy of a security product?These are the three possibilities:
It may not work, period. It may be corrupted and crash your machine.
It's likely to be loaded up with spyware or Trojans that will capture your personal information and send it back to the criminal syndicate who sold you the pirated software in the first place. Of course, they probably already have your financial or credit card information anyway if you bought the bogus copy online.
You won't receive updates. Even if the pirates managed to copy the code so it manages to do some security functions, it won't update, and your so-called security software will be obsolete in a week, leaving you vulnerable to attack.
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