High-tech

High-tech
Light

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

JPMorgan Chase customers see zero balances after technical glitch

*If we were using Techism instead of Capitalism, you wouldn't HAVE a bank account. You'd just have a report on whether you went to work six hours a day for five days per week, or worked online in an "idea bank" for the same duration. As long as you did, you'd have the right to eat every day at least three times, order whatever products you needed, go to the doctor, get your car or bicycle or whatever fixed, get on trains or planes, etc. In retirement at 60, you could work if you wanted to, or not. If you were physically impaired, you could participate in an idea bank. Hacking bank accounts wouldn't exist. Yachts and such would be something you checked out. All that would be a limiting factor would be your time after six hours, and the availability of a given resource in any region at that time. As demand shifted globally, resource distribution would automatically be shifted where the need was, so shortages would at most be a day or two the majority of the time. - Dan

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Network World Daily News AM Alert" <nww_newsletters@newsletters.networkworld.com>
Date: Mar 19, 2013 7:13 AM
Subject: JPMorgan Chase customers see zero balances after technical glitch
To: <aquarianm@gmail.com>
Cc:

Products of the week 3.18.13

Medical search engine said to find 'zebras' better than Google

Network World Daily News AM
March 19, 2013
Share this email

JPMorgan Chase customers see zero balances after technical glitch

Customers of JPMorgan Chase reported seeing zero balances in their accounts both online and on mobile, and speculated that the bank's systems had been hacked into.

READ MORE
 

Issue highlights

1. Products of the week 3.18.13

2. Medical search engine said to find 'zebras' better than Google

3. Salesforce.com integrates mobile Chatter apps with its CRM software

4. Skype instant messaging in China is censored, spied upon

5. Z10 sales start Friday in U.S., but Blackberry's future still far from certain

6. H-1B reform bill bolstered by testimony of mostly male visas

7. FBI's National Security Letter gag orders violate 1st Amendment, ruled unconstitutional

8. Study exposes impact of second-hand cellphone use

9. Unified Communications needs specialty middleware more than ever

10. Internal-use SSL certificates pose security risk for upcoming domain extensions

11. Apple CEO Tim Cook's approval rating drops

RESOURCE COMPLIMENTS OF: Phoenix NAP

Trust your data to Phoenix NAP High Density Colocation

Whatever your colocation needs, Phoenix NAP can effectively and efficiently meet them. Take advantage of one of the most natural disaster-free areas in the world with our flagship Phoenix, Arizona, location. Extend your reach with East Coast U.S. and Western Europe infrastructure centers. Get started today. See why Phoenix NAP is rapidly earning the trust as a knowledgeable advisor helping companies navigate through the changing world of IT infrastructure.

Products of the week 3.18.13

Our roundup of intriguing new products from companies such as Cisco, Fortinet, Sepaton READ MORE

Medical search engine said to find 'zebras' better than Google

"When you hear hoofbeats, think horses not zebras" - long a favorite expression - means that doctors are well advised to initially see common symptoms as evidence of common maladies, which is all well and good until the patient happens to be suffering from a rare disease. READ MORE

Salesforce.com integrates mobile Chatter apps with its CRM software

Salesforce.com will upgrade its Chatter enterprise social networking (ESN) application for iOS and release one for the first time for Android on Tuesday, delivering in both new capabilities to integrate them with its main CRM software. READ MORE

RESOURCE COMPLIMENTS OF: InterMapper

The #1 real-time network mapping and monitoring tool.

InterMapper provides an at-a-glance, real-time view of your network devices, services, applications, connections and traffic patterns. Drilling down on maps uncovers details needed to fix performance problems. It is an industrial strength monitoring, mapping and alerting tool that empowers network administrators to maintain healthy IT environments.

Skype instant messaging in China is censored, spied upon

The Chinese version of Skype contains spyware that searches for blacklisted words and phrases, blocks instant messages that contain them, copies them to servers and captures the rest of IM chats that have been flagged in this way, according to researchers. READ MORE

Z10 sales start Friday in U.S., but Blackberry's future still far from certain

BlackBerry Z10 sales kick off this Friday in the U.S., but it is still unclear how popular the smartphone and its Q10 cousin running BlackBerry 10 will be, amid a number of contradictory predictions and indicators. READ MORE

H-1B reform bill bolstered by testimony of mostly male visas

U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley has re-introduced an H-1B reform bill that once again takes aim at offshore outsourcers, and on Monday he got more ammunition for that battle. READ MORE

WHITE PAPER: Netscout Systems Inc.

Good APM Practices Get Results

According to NetForecast's survey, enterprises with application performance management (APM) best practices benchmark scores above six on a ten-point scale experience 75% better results in critical areas. This research paper reveals the survey results as well as discusses the best practices for APM. Learn More.

FBI's National Security Letter gag orders violate 1st Amendment, ruled unconstitutional

On Friday, a federal judge in the Ninth Circuit Court ruled that gag orders accompanying National Security Letters are unconstitutional! READ MORE

Study exposes impact of second-hand cellphone use

Those juicy tidbits gleaned from one-side cellphone conversations you happen to overhear are even more distracting than those juicy tidbits gleaned from accidentally overhearing conversations between two nearby people, according to University of San Diego researchers. READ MORE

Unified Communications needs specialty middleware more than ever

READ MORE

Internal-use SSL certificates pose security risk for upcoming domain extensions

The practice of issuing SSL certificates for internal domain names with unqualified extensions could endanger the privacy and integrity of HTTPS communications for upcoming generic top-level domains (gTLDs), according to a security advisory from the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN). READ MORE

Apple CEO Tim Cook's approval rating drops

Apple CEO Tim Cook's approval rating fell in the last 12 months, dropping Steve Jobs' successor to the 18th spot on an annual ranking of American chief executives. READ MORE

WHITE PAPER: Ipswitch, Inc. – Network Management Division

Considerations for Embracing Wireless Management

Wireless devices can have a significant impact on today's IT organizations. Poor planning around BOYD implementation can be a costly drain on IT staff and infrastructure resources. When developing a strategy or rethinking an existing implementation, there are several areas IT managers need to consider. Learn more.

SLIDESHOWS

How different tech degrees measure up

Here's our list of lucrative tech degrees, ranked from lowest to highest starting salary.

JOIN THE NETWORK WORLD COMMUNITIES

As network pros you understand that the value of connections increase as the number of connections increase, the so called network effect, and no where is this more evident than in professional relationships. Join Network World's LinkedIn and Facebook communities to share ideas, post questions, see what your peers are working on and scout out job applicants (or maybe find your next opportunity).

Network World on Facebook

Network World on LinkedIn

MOST-READ STORIES

1. 3G and 4G USB modems are a security threat, researcher says

2. First look: Samsung Galaxy S 4

3. iPhone 6 rumor rollup for the week ending March 15

9. Belkin closes Linksys acquisition

5. Security appliances are riddled with serious vulnerabilities, researcher says

6. Software-defined networking is a 'limiting vision' says Cisco CTO

7. How 7 strange tech terms got their names

8. 10 trends shaping IT hiring in 2013

10. 'NotCompatible' Android malware rears its ugly head, again

4. Honeypot for phoney waterworks gets hammered on Internet

Follow Network World

Share this email

You are currently subscribed to networkworld_daily_news_alert as aquarianm@gmail.com.

Unsubscribe from this newsletter | Manage your subscriptions | Subscribe | Privacy Policy

Learn about INSIDER

If you are interested in advertising in this newsletter, please contact: bglynn@cxo.com

To contact Network World, please send an e-mail to customer_service@nww.com

Copyright (C) 2013 Network World, 492 Old Connecticut Path, Framingham, MA 01701

** Please do not reply to this message. To contact someone directly, send an e-mail to customer_service@nww.com. **

No comments:

Post a Comment