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Information Technology

A startup promises a painless way to move existing software.

New software aims to expose mobile malware by monitoring a device's memory usage.

Geoffrey Cain reveals how Google.org, the philanthropic wing of the search giant, is using its algorithms to save the world

The previous Undercover columnist lamented the state of security hiring. Here's a response from the other side of the desk.

IBM has found a new source of revenue: using its mathematicians' formulas in business services.

The Google-China standoff has entered week eight, and no one's budged yet. China's still demanding that Google censor its search results there. Google's still refusing to censor them, while publicly lingering on its intentions to pull out of China if the

The flexible composite requires far less silicon than today's solar cells.

In a recent survey by marketing firm Edelman, it was revealed that consumers are losing trust in each other, when it comes to providing credible information about companies. In fact, confidence dropped by nearly half, since 2008. In 2008, 45 percent said

Is this the future of online banking? US company IronKey has come up with a USB drive that can be used to access accounts virtually without involving the operating system or applications that cause so many of today's security problems.

Ongoing computer scams targeting small businesses cost U.S. companies US$25 million in the third quarter of 2009, according to the U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

Hoping to catch cybercrooks, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation has begun embedding agents with law enforcement agencies in Estonia, the Ukraine and the Netherlands.

The lead-free material may make it easier and cheaper to make "stacked" chips with more computing power.

The global economy has begun a fragile recovery from a shattering recession. CIOs must now focus on opportunities for growth and important technology trends, while continuing to drive down costs. - Before the global economy took a nosedive in 2008, bus

Corporate espionage isn't a Cold War leftover; China-Google and

In the hurry to meet a regulatory compliance deadline, companies risk making some costly security mistakes. Here are five examples.