Mariela Gunn
Office: PAR 102
Hours: M 4-5 & Th 10-12
+ individual appointments
Security Blanket
Wired News, a pioneer in online journalism, has been at the forefront of daily technology news coverage since its launch in 1996. The site's mission is to provide an original, lively and timely chronicle of how technology affects our lives, for better or worse.URL
http://www.wired.com/Last update
1 hour 45 min agoDecember 1, 2005
04:00
The U.S. government squanders millions on failed programs that hope to nab terrorists as they board airplanes. It should be investing in real security that isn't tangled in yesterday's threats. Commentary by Bruce Schneier.
01:00
The U.S. government squanders millions on failed programs that hope to nab terrorists as they board airplanes. It should be investing in real security that isn't tangled in yesterday's threats. Commentary by Bruce Schneier.
01:00
The U.S. government squanders millions on failed programs that hope to nab terrorists as they board airplanes. It should be investing in real security that isn't tangled in yesterday's threats. Commentary by Bruce Schneier.
November 23, 2005
04:00
New corporate ownership won't exempt the bleeding-edge security conference from future Ciscogates, and clashing court decisions leave the outcome up for grabs. Commentary by Jennifer Granick.
01:00
New corporate ownership won't exempt the bleeding-edge security conference from future Ciscogates, and clashing court decisions leave the outcome up for grabs. Commentary by Jennifer Granick.
01:00
New corporate ownership won't exempt the bleeding-edge security conference from future Ciscogates, and clashing court decisions leave the outcome up for grabs. Commentary by Jennifer Granick.
November 17, 2005
04:00
Heavy holiday travel times spotlight the Transportation Security Administration's hopes that new technology will pick up what human airport-security screeners might fail to spot -- weapons. By Prachi Patel-Predd.
04:00
Law enforcement's attempts to keep tabs on suspects by following their mobile-phone signals face scattered resistance in court. Could this be the start of a judicial backlash? By Ryan Singel.
04:00
Antivirus software makers are nowhere to be found when Sony's CD Trojan horse comes knocking. Mere incompetence can't explain that. Commentary by Bruce Schneier.
01:00
Heavy holiday travel times spotlight the Transportation Security Administration's hopes that new technology will pick up what human airport-security screeners might fail to spot -- weapons. By Prachi Patel-Predd.
01:00
Law enforcement's attempts to keep tabs on suspects by following their mobile-phone signals face scattered resistance in court. Could this be the start of a judicial backlash? By Ryan Singel.
01:00
Antivirus software makers are nowhere to be found when Sony's CD Trojan horse comes knocking. Mere incompetence can't explain that. Commentary by Bruce Schneier.
01:00
Heavy holiday travel times spotlight the Transportation Security Administration's hopes that new technology will pick up what human airport-security screeners might fail to spot -- weapons. By Prachi Patel-Predd.
01:00
Law enforcement's attempts to keep tabs on suspects by following their mobile-phone signals face scattered resistance in court. Could this be the start of a judicial backlash? By Ryan Singel.
01:00
Antivirus software makers are nowhere to be found when Sony's CD Trojan horse comes knocking. Mere incompetence can't explain that. Commentary by Bruce Schneier.
November 15, 2005
10:38
How widespread is the damage from Sony's XCP rootkit software? New statistical evidence says 568,200 networks, including military and government targets, likely contain at least one infected machine. By Quinn Norton.
07:38
How widespread is the damage from Sony's XCP rootkit software? New statistical evidence says 568,200 networks, including military and government targets, likely contain at least one infected machine. By Quinn Norton.
07:38
How widespread is the damage from Sony's XCP rootkit software? New statistical evidence says 568,200 networks, including military and government targets, likely contain at least one infected machine. By Quinn Norton.
November 7, 2005
04:00
As Ciscogate closes, the man behind the Black Hat security conference reflects on the impact of the controversy on computer security research and network safety across the globe. Wired News interview by Kim Zetter.
01:00
As Ciscogate closes, the man behind the Black Hat security conference reflects on the impact of the controversy on computer security research and network safety across the globe. Wired News interview by Kim Zetter.
