On CBSNews.com: Can 365 Nights Of Sex Fix A Marriage?
3 Resources for

facta

TechRepublic Resources

Just the FACTA Please
This is just a head's up for those of you in the US. Have you heard of FACTA, the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act? At it's most basic, it means you get a free credit report, from the three...This post originally appeared on an external website
Tags: FACTA
Blog posts 2005-10-13
Implement a data destruction policy to keep corporate secrets safe
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act and other legislation have made data retention a hot topic. But about the flip side of the coin—what happens when your data has finally served its purpose? Mike Mullins explains the importance of a data destruction policy and discusses steps you can take to prevent unauthorized access...
Tags: Storage, FACTA, Advertising & Promotion, Regulatory compliance, Regulations, Michael Mullins CCNA, MCP, media, Security Solutions Newsletter, Unauthorized Access, Mike Mullins, Marketing, Michael \"Mullins CCNA, MCP\"
Technical articles 2005-08-11
FACTA "Red Flags Rule": Concern for security managers?
A new security compliance deadline arrives on November 1, 2008. If your organization is one of the covered entities, there are Red Flag rules concerning PII that you need to know about. Tom Olzak covers the basics of FACTA (U.S. Fair and Accurate Credit Transaction Act of 2003) for security...
Tags: Security Manager, FACTA, PII, Identity Theft, Security, Tom Olzak
Blog posts 2008-10-13

Additional Resources

Geek Trivia: May the Schwartz be with you
Test your command ofuseless knowledge by subscribing to TechRepublic's Geek Trivia e-newsletter. Automaticallysign up today!At first glance, the everyday geek may think I've liftedthis week's title from Mel Brooks' sci-fi parody Spaceballs, but I didn't. In fact, I stole this one from science-fictionlegend Harlan Ellison.And it didn't come from one...
Tags: comic, comic book, Jay Garmon, Julie, Julius Schwartz
Technical articles 2004-10-05
Is Apache inherently more secure than IIS?
Richard Stiennon at ZDNet argues that Apache is inherently less vulnerable to attacks than IIS, because it makes less system calls over the course of serving an HTML page, and is therefore less vulnerable to things like buffer overflow attacks. The argument, while have some prima facie appeal, is specious....
Tags: Apache Software Foundation, attack, HTML, Microsoft IIS Server, server, vulnerability, Web server
Blog posts 2006-04-14
  • << Previous
  • page 1 of 1
  • Next >>


TechRepublic FastAnswer: Assigning Keywords To Files - PDF
XP's Search feature can help you find data files on a workstation quickly, but you can make it even faster. This FastAnswer shows how to add keywords to file to help Search find them faster.
Buy Now
Microsoft Word Intermediate Skills
Microsoft Word Intermediate Skills is a preformatted presentation that you can use for helping end users better leverage Microsoft Word features. The ...
Buy Now

CIO Sessions