| IT News Daily | | | Disk storage sales grew more strongly in the third quarter, helped by sales of non-branded storage gear sold directly to datacenters. | | | Issue highlights 1. Intel to host Jesse Jackson on tech employee diversity 2. Apple, Xiaomi smartphones found violating privacy laws in Taiwan 3. US Senator introduces bill to block FBI backdoor access 4. Azure updates and human error caused Visual Studio Online outage 5. North Korea denies involvement in Sony Pictures hack 6. Apple to Host "Hour of Code" Workshops at its stores next week | | | Intel is hosting a meeting organized by Rev. Jesse Jackson's Rainbow Push Coalition, which has been demanding higher employment for blacks, Latinos and women in tech companies. READ MORE | | Smartphones from Apple, Xiaomi and others have been violating Taiwan's privacy laws by collecting user data and sending it back to company servers, according to a government regulator. READ MORE | | WHITE PAPER: VMTurbo, Inc. Read this whitepaper for these 3 takeaways: The complexities of pursuing efficient capacity planning How to define functional requirements for your capacity management strategy A capacity management strategy that assures service levels while reducing performance risk and hardware footprint Learn More>> | | U.S. Senator Ron Wyden on Thursday introduced a bill that would prevent the government from forcing companies to design backdoors or security vulnerabilities into their products to aid surveillance. READ MORE | | The second of two lengthy outages that hit Visual Studio Online in November was caused by the same kind of issues as the first, Microsoft has just disclosed. READ MORE | | WHITE PAPER: MaaS360 End users are demanding their own devices in the workplace making IT the shepherds of a potentially unruly flock. The good news is IT can embrace BYOD with security and confidence given the right preparation and technology. Whether you're supporting iOS, Android, BlackBerry or Windows, the rules of BYOD don't change. Learn More. | | North Korea, for the first time, has denied involvement in the recent cyber attack that hit Sony Pictures. READ MORE | | READ MORE | | | | |
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