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January 2005

January 2005 Cover


CYBERCRIME
Russian Roulette
Hacker Alexey Ivanov was lured to the United States and snared in a high-stakes cyber-sting. The FBI says he got what he deserved. But Ivanov says his gamble paid off. In the end, he got what he wanted all along.
By Art Jahnke


VIDEO SURVEILLANCE
Reality TV
The reasons to invest in new video surveillance systems are everywhere. Zoom in on these six insights to help you focus on what's important and what's just hype.
By Scott Berinato


INFOSECURITY SURVEY
A Long Way to Grow
First results from a new security management survey indicate that many companies have only rudimentary practices in place
By Derek Slater


THE LONG VIEW
Securing the Post-Human Future
CSOs will very likely live to see the day when human brains are easily augmentable through an array of knowledge implants, apps and Wi-Fi capabilities. If securing an enterprise seems tricky today, imagine installing firewalls in a few thousand employees' prefrontal lobes.
By Fred Hapgood





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FROM THE EDITOR
Men Behaving Badly
The big talk recently in the world of sports concerned the player-fan basketball melee in Detroit.
By Lew McCreary


SECURITY COUNSEL
Identity Protection
Judith Collins is an associate professor at the School of Criminal Justice at Michigan State University. She answers readers' questions about securing customers' and employees' personal information.


CSO UNDERCOVER
Why Convergence Is Elusive
Last month, CSO's editor asked why CSOs can't all just get along in a world of converged security management. The problem is that we've got to raise our profiles in the corporate world first.


BRIEFING
· The Electronic Road to the White House
· Ridge's Successor Can Beef Up Public-Private Ties
· Employers Fight Oklahoma Gun Law
· The Security Blotter
· Bug Vendors


WONK
Challenges In and Out
As DHS struggles to find a permanent cybersecurity chief, its CIO and CISO are grappling with challenges of their own


TOP BILLING
News from inside the beltway

MACHINE SHOP
Beyond Passport Vulnerabilities
Security flaws in high-profile products like Microsoft's Passport led experts and vendors to find new ways to disclose bugs
By Simson Garfinkel


TOOLBOX
Putting Out Fires
It wasn't your typical vendor meeting, reports a CSO colleague of mine.
By Todd Datz


DEBRIEFING
Great Moments in Vulnerability Disclosure

LETTERS
Reader Comments










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THE IDG NETWORK
CIO :: CMO :: Darwin :: Computerworld :: Network World :: Infoworld :: PC World :: Bio-IT World
IT Careers:: JavaWorld :: Macworld :: Mac Central :: Playlist :: GamePro :: GameStar :: Gamerhelp



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January 2005