Data

  • Filing Your Taxes Online From Public WiFi? Just say No!

    According to a recent survey, as many as 65% of the people filing their taxes online are actually doing it from public, open, wifi connections. Seriously, just stop it already! Look, I travel a lot. I understand the need, and the convenience, of soaking up some bandwidth at the airport, Starbucks, hotel, whatever. Just don’t…

  • What I’m Reading (weekly)

    Has the Law Firm Holding Your Data Ever Suffered a Breach? You May Never Know tags: LitSupport MM Security Electronic Discovery: The In-housers take charge — File under, if law firms won’t adapt to deal with advanced technology, and perhaps even data security issues, clients will do for themselves. tags: LitSupport MM Technical Competence for…

  • What I’m Reading (weekly)

    Sensitive Data Finder from Nuix tags: MM Security Data loss? — Your company data is all over the place, get used to it. tags: MM Security Why is eDiscovery a Mystery to Attorneys? — That’s a good question. It’s not “new” anymore! tags: MM LitSupport Introverts Love Facebook and Extroverts Hate It. Here’s Why. —…

  • What I’m Reading (weekly)

    Everyone Wants You To Have Security, But Not from Them tags: MM Tech eDiscovery: Access We Can Do, Securing Data…Not So Easy tags: LitSupport MM Ennui: Have We Grown Weary of e-Discovery? tags: LitSupport MM FreeFileSync – Catastrophe Protection tags: MM Tech Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

  • What I’m Reading (weekly)

    Marriott tentatively backs off Wi-Fi blocking plans tags: Tech MM Deduplication Hidden Downsides tags: LitSupport MM Nuix webinar on 28 January: eDiscovery – are you seeing the whole picture? tags: LitSupport MM Evernote, LastPass, Pocket, and Wunderlist offer combined one-year subscription bundle for $60 tags: MM Tech Facebook will alert you when kids go missing…

  • Hotels Want to Block WiFi devices

    http://money.cnn.com/2014/12/25/technology/marriott-wifi/index.html In its petition to the FCC, Marriott and the hotel lobby argued that guests can use their smartphones or Mi-Fi devices to launch an attack against a hotel’s Wi-Fi network or threaten other guests’ privacy (by stealing their credit card data or other personal information). They also said that those gadgets can interfere with…