Tuesday, May 14, 2013

10 questions to help businesses assess their email systems ...

Takeaway: Email is a critical communications tool, yet some organizations don?t give it the attention it needs. These questions will help you uncover oversights and develop better processes.

Email is an established business mainstay, but new challenges continue to emerge and old problems continue to exist. If you haven?t already done so, here are 10 questions to ask yourself about your office email.

1: Is email a mission-critical system?

Amazingly, most enterprise disaster recovery and business continuation plans don?t include email. But today, email is the bread-and-butter communication system in organizations. There is strong argument that email should make the mission-critical systems list.

2: How solid is our backup and recovery plan for email?

Many organizations are sloppy and even nonchalant with their email recovery and backup ? especially if email is not on the mission-critical list. They shouldn?t be. Email today is the communications lifeline of organizations.

3: How long should email be retained?

This is a major question for organizations, especially since e-discovery used in legal proceedings demands access to email history. It is also important internally to maintain a history of emails, because it helps clarify communications. Finally, there are industry regulations that demand that organizations retain email (e.g., Sarbanes Oxley, HIPAA). Based on the requirements an organization is subject to, IT and end business users should define an appropriate email retention policy.

4: When do we take out the email trash?

Email is a major source of Big Data garbage accumulation. As an example, when a user sends an email with a large file attachment to a distribution list of 20 other recipients throughout the enterprise, that attachment gets copied multiple times on disk, eating up storage in the process. Techniques like deduplication exist to weed out unnecessary duplicate data. This is one way that IT can ensure more compact repositories of email history.

5: Do we need a dedicated server for email?

Many small and medium-size businesses (SMBs) combine email with other systems on the same server so they can maximize server capacity. But this amalgamation of systems on a single server can also complicate disaster recovery and failover for your email, rendering email unavailable for extended periods of time. Email is one system that presents a strong argument for a dedicated server because it is so vital to business communications.

6: Should we outsource email to the cloud?

Organizations are making the move to VDI (virtual desktop infrastructure) to save on software licensing fees, and some of this movement has also included email. However, as more companies begin to see their email as mission critical and not as a commodity office system, there is also movement to keep email as an internal system. IT managers need to weigh the cost and governance requirements of in-house email stewardship versus moving email to a third-party cloud hosting services.

7: What?s the best way to integrate email with other systems?

In recent years, organizations have moved to total integration of email with instant messaging, VoIP (voice over IP), and presence. The goal is anywhere-anytime instantaneous access to employees. Employees can also forward workflows from integrated messaging to others when they?re off grid. If you want this integration for your email but still don?t have it, the best way to get it is to find a vendor-business partner with the expertise to help you with your integration.

8: How clear is our email policy?

An email usage policy that gets reviewed annually with employees is a necessity, but most companies don?t do this. The consequences can be severe. A few years ago, I was managing IT and one of my company?s employees was getting bullied and threatened in emails from an old boyfriend who was an employee at another company. Ultimately, the ex-boyfriend lost his job. The company firing him had an email policy in place that it regularly reviewed with employees and that addressed his specific behavior, and what the consequences would be ? so there was no misunderstanding.

9: Do employees understand that the company ?owns? their email?

The First Amendment guarantees one?s right to privacy and also the right to free speech, but corporate email is a company asset. Employees need to be made aware that their communications via corporate email are for representing the company. Corporate email should not be used as private or personal email, and it should never be used to divulge corporate intellectual property without authorization. These practices should be stated in employee handbooks and regularly reinforced in annual training. Since IT, HR, and business managers are the ultimate enforcers when there is a breach of email policy, these areas should also be taking the lead to ensure that everyone in the company has a thorough, upfront understanding of corporate email position on privacy, intellectual property, etc.

10: Do we have a set of best practices for email automation?

Routinely, employees set email for automated messages: ?I am out of the office and will return on Tuesday to answer my email.? If you have a corporate policy need to standardize which automation messages and practices employees are to use, these standards should be communicated to employees so employees are consistent in the ways that they use email automation.

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Source: http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/10things/10-questions-to-help-businesses-assess-their-email-systems/3721

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Sunday, May 12, 2013

Bloomberg bars reporters from client activity

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Financial data and news company Bloomberg LP says it has corrected a "mistake" in its newsgathering policies and cut off its journalists' special access to client log-in activity on the company's ubiquitous trading information terminals after Goldman Sachs complained about the matter last month.

A person familiar with the matter said Friday that Goldman Sachs became concerned about outside access after a Bloomberg reporter, investigating what she thought was the departure of a Goldman employee, told the securities firm that the employee had not logged into a Bloomberg terminal for a number of weeks.

The person was not authorized to speak publicly and gave the information on condition of anonymity.

Separately, the Federal Reserve is looking into whether Bloomberg journalists tracked data about terminal usage by top Fed officials, a spokeswoman said. The agency has contacted Bloomberg to learn more, she said.

On Saturday, CNBC reported that a former Bloomberg employee said he accessed information about terminal usage by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and former Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner.

The Fed spokeswoman wouldn't comment on the CNBC report. A Treasury spokesman couldn't be reached for comment.

In a memo sent to staff Friday, Bloomberg CEO Daniel Doctoroff said the company had "long made limited customer relationship data available to our journalists," but added, "we realize this was a mistake."

After the complaint last month, Bloomberg "immediately" turned off its journalists' special access and limited it to what clients can see themselves, he said.

The dispute was earlier reported by The Wall Street Journal.

Bloomberg News reporters had been able to see when any of the company's 315,000 paying subscribers, mostly stock and bond traders, had last logged into the service. They could also view the types of "functions" individual subscribers had accessed.

For instance, reporters could see if subscribers had been looking at top news stories, or if they had been gathering data on stocks or bonds, but not which stories or bonds and stocks they had looked up, said Ty Trippet, a Bloomberg LP spokesman. He said reporters could also see if subscribers were using "message" or "chat" functions to send messages to each other over the terminals, but not the recipient of the messages or their content.

Reporters were mostly getting contact information for subscribers, like telephone numbers and email addresses, Trippet said.

In his staff memo, Doctoroff said that access did not extend to "trading, portfolio, monitor, blotter or other related systems or our clients' messages."

He said senior executive Steve Ross had been appointed to the new position of client data compliance officer to review Bloomberg's policies.

No reporters have been fired over the matter, Trippet said. He declined to comment on whether any other disciplinary measures have been taken or if the company had plans to do so.

Although Goldman's concerns caused the change, JPMorgan Chase & Co. had also expressed concerns about Bloomberg journalists' access to sensitive data.

A person familiar with the matter at JPMorgan said multiple Bloomberg reporters had used the data to try to break news in the last several years. The person said Bloomberg journalists used their access attempting to find out whether disciplinary action had been taken against Bruno Iksil, a JPMorgan trader nicknamed the "London whale" who was blamed for a $6 billion trading loss last year.

One reporter knew details about the log-in times of multiple traders on a single desk and called daily to ask about potential layoffs, the person said. JPMorgan complained to the reporters about the technique but Bloomberg managers weren't made aware of a formal complaint.

The person was not authorized to speak publicly about the matter and requested anonymity.

Bloomberg's Trippet said he was unaware of complaints from JP Morgan to reporters or editors.

It's not clear exactly how long Bloomberg reporters have been accessing subscriber information.

"Limited customer relationship data has long been available to our journalists," Trippet wrote in an email. The access dates back to the 1990s, when Bloomberg's news operation began. Journalists would join sales representatives on calls to clients, he said, to explain how Bloomberg's news functions work.

Bloomberg journalists are renowned for aggressive techniques in a competitive field. Bloomberg LP, whose main business is selling terminals to clients in the financial industry, employs more than 2,400 journalists.

In November 2010, the news service reported on the earnings of The Walt Disney Co. and NetApp Inc. well before the companies' scheduled releases by guessing the unprotected website addresses of the press releases before they were made public.

The public relations gaffes, which resulted in immediate but fleeting dips in the stock prices of both companies, resulted in the companies taking action to prevent a recurrence.

__

AP Business Writer Bernard Condon in New York and AP Economics Writer Christopher Rugaber in Washington contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bloomberg-bars-reporters-client-activity-174947142.html

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Worst Performance Ever By a White House Press Secretary (Powerlineblog)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/305081016?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Dollar rises above 100 yen for 1st time in 4 years

TOKYO (AP) ? The dollar soared above 100 yen for the first time in more than four years Friday, driven by aggressive credit-easing aimed at reviving Japan's sluggish economy and improved U.S. economic figures.

The U.S. dollar rose as high as 101.30 yen, the first time since April 2009 that the greenback has traded above 100 yen. The move lifted Japanese stocks to their highest level in more than five years.

The weaker yen is a boon to Japan's major auto and electronics exporters. The government said the yen's fall signaled that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's policy mix of increased public spending and aggressive monetary easing, dubbed "Abenomics," was proving successful. Kick-starting the economy has been Abe's top priority since he took office late last year.

"With Abenomics, we hope that the Japanese economy will grow and can contribute to the global economy," said Yoshihide Suga, the chief Cabinet spokesman. "It's better that stocks are high than low. We believe this is a sign that our policies are progressing well."

Japan's Nikkei 225 stock average jumped 2.9 percent to 14,607.54, its highest close since January 2008.

The central bank's monetary easing, and expectations it will help reverse persistent deflation, have helped drive the value of the yen down by more than 20 percent against the dollar since October, when it was trading at around 78 yen.

The yen's sustained fall has riled some of Japan's trading partners but generally won support from leaders of other major economies eager to see the world's third-biggest economy recover from two decades of stagnation. Abe has pushed both fiscal and monetary stimulus strategies to help Japan end a long bout of deflation and support domestic demand.

Japanese officials have fought accusations that Tokyo may be manipulating its currency to give its exporters a boost, and so far international financial institutions generally have backed Abe's approach.

"The yen's value is at a reasonable level, since the accommodative plan of the Bank of Japan is quite ambitious," Naoyuki Shinohara, deputy director of the International Monetary Fund, told reporters in Tokyo. "The easy monetary policy will cause the currency to depreciate. That is axiomatic," he said.

Optimism about the U.S. economy also lifted the dollar after several positive indicators were released. The Labor Department said Thursday that unemployment claims fell to the lowest level in more than five years. And last week, figures showed that the U.S. economy had added 165,000 jobs in April, lowering the unemployment rate fell to 7.5 percent.

"Worries began to grow that U.S. economy wasn't doing so well, but in May the figures improved. So with concerns about the U.S. easing, the dollar is rising," said Takuya Kanda, a currency analyst at Gaitame.com Research Institute in Tokyo.

"If U.S. economy improves, and the Bank of Japan's aggressive easing continues ... that will lead to further dollar strength and yen weakness," said Kanda, who predicts the dollar will rise to 110 yen this year.

A weaker yen helps Japan's key exporters by boosting overseas earnings when repatriated and by making goods produced within Japan for export more affordable in markets abroad. However, it raises costs in yen terms of the imported crude oil and natural gas that resource-scarce Japan must rely on to keep its industries humming and power its cities.

Japan's long robust trade surpluses have turned to deficits in the past two years, after demand for imports of oil and gas rose due to the closure of nuclear power plants following the March 2011 tsunami.

The current account balance, which includes financial flows, has remained positive. However the current account surplus fell to 4.3 trillion yen ($43 billion), its lowest level ever, in the fiscal year that ended March 31, down 43.6 percent from a year earlier, according to data released Friday.

The central bank, under its new governor Haruhiko Kuroda, has vowed to double the monetary base through purchases of government bonds to meet a 2 percent inflation target within the next two years.

By joining the U.S. Federal Reserve and other major central banks in flooding the economy with cash, the Bank of Japan hopes to get corporations and consumers to begin spending more and end a long malaise.

But Abenomics faces risks, too, including the impact of increased public spending on Japan's already enormous national debt and whether higher inflation will also push up interest rates, raising borrowing costs.

"I think Abenomics is being evaluated well so far," Kanda said. "But people will be watching closely how his policies will unfold and impact the broader economy."

Shinohara, the IMF official, said he believed Japan's financial markets would adjust after a period of volatility brought on by its massive monetary easing, but he expressed concern over the country's burgeoning public debt, which is more than twice the size of its economy and double the average for other industrial economies.

"The IMF's mission is to watch for risk factors, and the fiscal stimulus is of concern because it must be accompanied by a credible plan for fiscal consolidation."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dollar-rises-above-100-yen-1st-time-4-015957510.html

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Friday, May 10, 2013

Video: Betting Big on Casino Stocks

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/51820410/

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A Free After Contract Lumia 920 Is Your Deal of the Day

The Lumia 920 is the best Windows 8 phone you can currently buy. Sure, it might have a little too much junk in the trunk, but that girth houses the king of smartphone cameras. It's built like a tank. And although Windows Phone 8 is still a little behind in app availability, it's catching up every day. If you've wanted to give the Microsoft mobile operating system a try, there's never been a better time?AT&T is running a one-day sale where a Lumia 920 is free with a new contract. Of course, there's still the cost of the contract, but that's easy to overlook when you're live-tiling it up. Those tiles?they're so alive. [AT&T]

Also, if you wanted the HTC First, the heralded Facebook phone?and the only HTC LTE phone that can run stock Android?it's only a buck after contract. [AT&T]

Top Deals

? Lumia 920 with 2-Year AT&T Contract ($0) | AT&T

? HTC First with 2-Year AT&T Contract ($1) | AT&T

For a steady stream of true deals, updated daily, check out deals.kinja.com. And if you've got a Kinja account, click that little grey (+) next to the banner to follow. [Deals Kinja]

Accessories

? 16GB Samsung SDHC Card ($12.59) | Newegg via Edealinfo | Originally $20 | Use coupon code EMCXRXN64

? 128GB Lexar Pro SD Card ($119) | Adorama via Photography Bay | Originally $150

? 1TB LaCie Thunderbolt HD ($150) | MacMall via 9to5Toys | Originally $300

Miscellaneous

? Chef Works Apron ($9.85) | Amazon via Reddit | Originally $20

? LEGO Architecture White House ($35) | Amazon via Ben's Bargains | Originally $50

? Fenix Cree XP-G LD22 Flashlight ($40) | Amazon via Ben's Bargains | Originally $60

Gaming

PC

The Humble Double Fine Bundle [PC/Mac/Linux]
? Pay anything to get Costume Quest, Stacking, Psychonauts
? Pay ($1+) for [Steam] keys
? Beat the average ($8.09+) to get Brutal Legend
? Pay ($35) to pre-order Broken Age (and get everything else)

Tropico Bundle | IndieGala
? Pay what you want for Tropico Reloaded, min. $1 for [Steam] key
? Pay ($5.20+) for Tropico 3 - Steam Special Edition
? Pay ($9.10+) for Tropico 4 - Steam Special Edition

? The FREE Bundle #6 | 5 games including The Silver Lining

? Dishonored ($30) | Steam via Hard Forum | Originally $60

PS3

? Mass Effect Trilogy ($40) | Amazon via Deals

? Pre-order Kingdom Hearts HD 1.5 Remix ($40) | Amazon via Daily Game Deals | Includes limited edition art book.

? Skyrim ($30) | Amazon

Xbox

? Mass Effect Trilogy ($40) | Amazon via Deals

? FREE Doritos Crash Course 2 | Microsoft

? Skyrim ($30) | Amazon
? Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning ($20) | Amazon
? Fallout: New Vegas Ultimate Edition ($20) | Amazon

As always, for more gaming deals you've got to check out the Moneysaver over on Kotaku.

Audio

? Sennheiser PMX680 Sports Earubds ($24) | VMInnovations via Edealinfo | Originally $30 | Try coupon code FACEBOOK

? AKG HD 142 Open Headphones ($73) | World Wide Stereo via Dealmac | Originally $100 | Use coupon code DNEWS142

Clothing

? JC Penney Oxford Cloth Shirt ($21) | JC Penney via Reddit | Originally $40 | Use coupon code SPREE10

? Buy One Get One Half Off T-Shirts at ThinkGeek | ThinkGeek via Fatwallet

? 30% off J. Crew Sale | J. Crew via Put This On | Use coupon code SUNSHINE

Dumb TV ? Smart TV

Nope.

Physical Media

? Sin City ($5) | Best Buy via Deals Kinja | Originally $10

? Gladiator ($13) | Amazon via Brand Name Coupons | Originally $20

? Chinatown ($15) | Amazon via Brand Name Coupons | Originally $20

? Django Unchained ($18) | Amazon via Deals Kinja | Originally $30

Digital Media

Nah.

Laptops

? Dell Inspiron 13Z ($381) | Newegg via Ben's Bargains | Originally $500

Desktops

? Asus EEE Box w/ 32GB SSD + Atom processor ($189) | Amazon via Fatwallet | Originally $250 | Use coupon code INTELPCS

? Dell Precision w/ Intel Xeon + NVIDIA Quadro 2000 ($700) | Dell via Edealinfo | Originally $1000

Tablets

? Refurb 7" Samsung Galaxy Tab ($129) | Daily Steals via Ben's Bargains

Screens

? ViewSonic 24" 1080p Monitor ($140) | Amazon via Deals Kinja | Originally $180

? 50" 1080p Seiki HDTV ($400) | Sears via Edealinfo | Originally $600

? 27" LG IPS Monitor ($700) | Newegg via Dealmac | Originally $850 | Use coupon code EMCYTZT3417

Portables

? Verizon Microsoft Kin ($25) | Dailysteals via Edealinfo

? Unlocked Blackberry Z10 ($610) | Newegg via Edealinfo | Originally $690 | Use coupon code EMCXRXN222

Camera

? Canon PowerShot ELPH 520 ($129) | via Photography Bay | Originally $180

? Rokinon 35mm f/1.4 Wide Angle Lens for Canon or Sony ($359) | BuyDig.com via Ben's Bargains | Originally $500 | Use coupon code PhotoPro125

? Samsung NX100 + 2 Lenses ($400) | B&H Photo via Photography Bay | Originally $600

? Nikon D600 Bundle ($2400) | B&H Photo via Photography Bay | Originally $2800

Bare Drives

? 250GB Samsung 840 SSD ($160) | Rakuten via Ben's Bargains | Originally $200 | Use coupon code 52331CF

? 500GB Samsung 840 ($325) | Ecost via Edealinfo | Originally $350

Apps

iOS

? AirDisk Pro ($0) | iTunes via Appshopper | Originally $2

? Read Quick ($0) | iTunes via Appshopper | Originally $4

iPad Only

? Fetch ($3) | iTunes via Appshopper | Originally $4

Android

? My Kingdom for the Princess ($0) | Amazon Appstore via Brand Name Coupons | Originally $4

? NFL Kicker 13 ($0) | Google Play via Appsales | Originally $2

? Strategy & Tactics: WW II ($1) | Google Play via Reddit | Originally $5

? Liquid Cloud Live Wallpaper ($1) | Google Play via Appsales | Originally $2

? Robird ($1) | Google Play via Appsales | Originally $2

? IM+ Pro ($2) | Google Play via Appsales | Originally $5

? Giana Sisters ($2) | Google Play via Appsales | Originally $4

Hobomodo

No freebies.


Keep up with Kif Leswing on Kinja and Twitter. Check out The Moneysaver for more great tech deals, and deals.kinja.com for even more discounts.


A note on Dealzmodo: We're professional shoppers. Yes, we make money if you end up buying. That's capitalism, but we're absolutely looking out for your best interest. Read this if you want to know more.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/a-free-with-contract-lumia-920-is-your-deal-of-the-day-496462500

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