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Submission + - The 14 Best Tech Companies To Work For In 2015 (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: Glassdoor's annual list of the 50 Best Places To Work is out, and tech companies make a strong showing again this year, with Google coming out on top, and not just among tech companies. What makes Google a particularly great place to work? 'My work is used by lots and lots of users. It's cool stuff that makes people happy. I'm learning a lot which will make me employable within Google and elsewhere. I get to go home whenever I want to enjoy my free time and I make enough money to travel.' says one Google Developer Advocate. Compare that to Qualcomm, which came in 14th overall and 4th among tech companies, where the reviewer, a Qualcomm Staff Engineer/Manager, waxes realistic about the work life balance, saying it is good 'in some divisions.' Or LinkedIn (23rd overall, 8th among tech companies) where work schedules are 'generally pretty flexible.' Or NVIDIA (36th overall, 11th among tech companies) where promotions are meted out based on talent 'over years of experience.'

Submission + - Apple, IBM Partnership Yields First Results: 10 Mobile Apps (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: IBM and Apple have unveiled the first results of the enterprise IT partnership they announced in July: 10 mobile applications aimed at businesses in six industries as well as government users. One of the apps, for example, allows a flight crew to personalize a passenger's in-flight experience. An app targeted at the banking industry allows a financial advisor to remotely access and manage a client's portfolio. And police officers can use iPhones to view video feeds from crime scenes with an app for law enforcement.

Submission + - DOJ Wants Companies To Trust the Government on Cybersecurity (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: During a forum on cybersecurity in Washington, D.C. Tuesday, Leslie Caldwell, assistant attorney general with the DOJ's Criminal Division, called for private companies to put more trust in the country's law enforcement agencies. Caldwell pointed to smartphone encryption as one area that is likely to become a problem for law enforcement. ‘We really need to think long and hard about whether we want to create a zone of lawlessness that law enforcement can't access,’ she said. ‘I think that's a very dangerous precedent that's been set.’

Submission + - Bluetooth Gains Direct Internet Access, Security Enhancements (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: The Bluetooth spec never quite became the worldbeater it was billed as, but it's aiming to become indispensible to the Internet of Things. Updates to the spec make it possible for low-powered Bluetooth devices to gain direct access to the Internet, and, perhaps more importantly, make those devices a lot harder to hack.

Submission + - Microsoft COO: Windows 10 Won't Be A 'Loss Leader' (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: With Microsoft aiming to make more money from cloud services and software subscriptions, some have speculated that Windows itself might be given away for free with the aim of locking users into Microsoft's ecosystem. But company COO Kevin Turner says that, while Windows 10 pricing hasn't been decided yet, it definitely won't be a "loss leader".

Submission + - Intel Invests Billions in Mobile Ambitions (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: The allure of mobile devices has led Intel to take some uncharacteristic moves, partnering with Chinese companies to build some smartphone and tablet chips, and relying on third parties to manufacture those chips. Intel is betting the partnerships will accelerate its business in China, where smartphone shipments are booming. But the company wants to regain complete control over manufacturing, and on Thursday said it was investing $1.6 billion over 15 years in a China plant for mobile chip development and manufacturing.

Submission + - Microsoft Lost $188K A Day On The Nook (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: In 2012, Microsoft invested $300 million in Barnes & Noble's Nook division. This week, Microsoft agreed to sell its interest back to B&N so that the struggling bookstore could try to spin the division off as a separate business or sell it. The sale price was so low that Microsoft essentially lost nearly $190,000 every day on the botched attempt to gain access to the e-reader ecosystem.

Submission + - EU May Not Unify Its Data Protection Rules After All (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: One of the EU's selling points is that it provides a single regulatory apparatus for the entire European market — but this isn't the case for everything. Data protection laws, for instance, provide a confusing thicket of different regulations across the continent, and now, much to the frustration of large American Internet companies, it seems that a plan to consolidate these rules under a single EU agency are coming apart.

Submission + - LinkedIn Social Login Flaw Allows Access To Slashdot, Other Sites (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: IBM's X Force security researchers found an easy way to gain access to Web accounts by taking an advantage of an oversight in how some social login services are configured. The attack that abuses LinkedIn is demonstrated in a video included in a blog post. The attacker creates an account with LinkedIn, using the victim's email address. Once the LinkedIn account is created, the attacker goes to Slashdot (or Nasdaq.com, Crowdfunder.com and other sites) by abusing LinkedIn's social login mechanism. and uses the social login feature.

Submission + - Silicon Valley Startups Discover Power of Political Lobbying (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: In the last three months, Fitbit, Snapchat and Sidecar all began lobbying in Washington for the first time, each paying D.C.-based lobbying companies to monitor moves by the federal government and lawmakers that might impact their business. Some companies have gone a step further and opened their own office in D.C., with their own lobbyist. Uber began in-house lobbying this year, less than a year after it first arrived in Washington, and has already spent $100,000 on its own efforts. Music streaming service Pandora, which has spent almost a million dollars on lobbying in the last four years, registered its own lobbyist in September and quickly spent a further $120,000. And then there's the erstwhile over-air TV streaming company Aereo, which had already spent $820,000 over two and a half years to pay a lobbying company, and then a few months after the Supreme Court ruling it filed papers to begin lobbying activity itself.

Submission + - FTC: Online Billing Service Deceptively Collected Medical Records (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: The FTC has reached a proposed settlement with PaymentsMD, an Atlanta health billing company that used the sign-up process for its billing service to surreptitiously seek customers’ consent to obtain detailed medical information. The medical information PaymentsMD requested included customers’ prescriptions, procedures, medical diagnoses, lab tests performed and their results, and other information, the FTC said. The bright spot in all this: In all but one case, the health care providers contacted for data refused to comply with PaymentsMD’s requests.

Submission + - Panasonic Builds A Zero-Emission Suburb In Japan (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: Fujisawa Sustainable Smart Town is a subdivision taking shape southwest of Tokyo. Built buy Panasonic, it aims to eventually produce zero CO2, but in the short term will reduce CO2 emissions by 70 percent compared to 1990 levels, as well as reducing water use by 30 percent. The town features lots and lots of solar panels, and, as you might expect, lots and lots of Panasonic appliances and gadgets.

Submission + - Iranian Hackers Compromised Airlines, Critical Infrastructure Companies (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: For the past two years, a team of Iranian hackers has compromised computers and networks belonging to over 50 organizations in 16 countries, including airlines, defense contractors, universities, military installations, hospitals, airports, telecommunications firms, government agencies, and energy and gas companies, researchers from IT security firm Cylance said in an extensive report released Tuesday. According to the report, 'ten of these victims are headquartered in the US and include a major airline, a medical university, an energy company specializing in natural gas production, an automobile manufacturer, a large defense contractor, and a major military installation.'

Submission + - Want To Work For A Cool Tech Company? Hone Your Social Skills

jfruh writes: Big companies like Google may need to fill seats with high-skilled workers, but smaller companies — which often fit the profile of the hip workplaces people dream of — still have the luxury of picking and choosing. That's why applicants' social skills and "cultural fit" are so important, which may shatter your dreams of tech as a clique-free meritocracy.

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