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PHONE+ October 15, 2009 |
T-Mobile Gets Lucky: Most Sidekick Data Recovered T-Mobile USA caught a break in the Sidekick data vaporization debacle on Thursday, thanks to Microsoft Corp. being able to recover "most" of the information lost in a server meltdown over the weekend. |
InternetNews October 12, 2009 |
T-Mobile, Microsoft: Sidekick Data Gone for Good After a week of service outages for some users of the Sidekick mobile device, U.S. wireless carrier T-Mobile is confirming that data that vanished during the downtime is now permanently lost. |
InternetNews October 16, 2009 |
Sidekick Snafu: Data Restored But Lawsuits Filed Can Microsoft bring back T-Mobile Sidekick users' lost content in time to stave off more lawsuits? |
AskMen.com |
$100 For Your Life Owners of Sidekick phones may have lost all the personal information they put on the device, including contact numbers, because of a failure of servers that remotely stored the data. |
InternetNews October 13, 2009 |
T-Mobile May Get Sidekick Data Back After All Sidekick user data could be restored in a potential reversal of fortune for owners of the handsets. |
PHONE+ October 12, 2009 |
T-Mobile Yanks Sidekick Amid Data Loss Catastrophe T-Mobile USA has halted sales of its popular messaging-friendly Sidekick device, after a server meltdown essentially erased subscribers' saved e-mail, photos, address books, calendars and to-do lists. |
InternetNews July 1, 2010 |
Facebook Simplifies Privacy Policy for Apps In an effort to help users understand how much information they're sharing with third parties - and to satisfy its agreement with the Canadian government - Facebook is tweaking its privacy rules for apps. |
InternetNews June 20, 2007 Roy Mark |
Getting More Money to ID Theft Victims FTC sends another 2,400 reimbursement forms to consumers victimized by ChoicePoint's 2004 data breach. |
Fast Company David Lumb |
Google Reveals A Pay-Per-GB Wireless Service Google has just confirmed its wireless service, called Project Fi. |
Information Today August 11, 2008 George H. Pike |
CriminalSearches.com Offers Free Access to Criminal Records It recently has become much easier to find out whether your daughter's boyfriend or your new neighbor has a criminal record. |
InternetNews June 1, 2007 Roy Mark |
ChoicePoint Settles With 44 States in Data Losses Data broker ChoicePoint agrees to pay $500,000 and to strengthen data protection measures. |
PC World December 2002 Anne B. McDonald |
T-Mobile Asks: Need a Good Sidekick? All-in-one Sidekick is an efficient, attractively priced PDA, but its cell phone performance is below par. |
InternetNews January 29, 2010 |
Google Says Nexus One Service Outage Fixed Some users of Google's Nexus One smartphone had problems connecting via carrier T-Mobile's network earlier today, leading to a rash of complaints on blogs and other online forums. |
InternetNews January 26, 2006 Roy Mark |
FTC Slaps Record Fine on ChoicePoint Info broker agrees to $15 million in penalties for last year's massive data breach. The company's stock subsequently dropped $3.05 a share to $43.25. |
InternetNews November 21, 2007 |
T-Mobile to Sell iPhone in Germany Without Contract The move, which will also see the wireless carrier unlocking phones, comes following a court injunction obtained by rival Vodafone. |
InternetNews December 7, 2006 Roy Mark |
ChoicePoint ID Theft Victims' Day Has Come The Federal Trade Commission notifies out-of-pocket identity theft victims how to tap a $5 million restitution fund. |
CIO March 15, 2006 Allan Holmes |
The Profits in Privacy Contrary to popular belief, protecting the privacy of customer data and making a profit are not mutually exclusive goals. Here are several leading companies who have accomplished both and how they pulled it off. |
Fast Company Pavithra Mohan |
Hackers Compromise T-Mobile Customer Data, Steal 15 Million Records In the past year, a staggering number of high-profile hacks have been carried out against various companies and organizations, including a large-scale attack that leaked the personal information of 22 million government employees. |
InternetNews January 13, 2005 Jim Wagner |
T-Mobile Investigating Alleged Hacker The Secret Service has joined T-Mobile to find out the damage caused by a network breach. |
PC Magazine September 1, 2009 Jamie Lendino |
Send Free Text Messages Via E-Mail The person receiving the message still has to pay for these - but you won't have to, and that's what counts, right? |
Fast Company Steven Melendez |
T-Mobile "Binge On" Video Streaming Program Accused Of Throttling Traffic To YouTube YouTube says that T-Mobile is throttling traffic to YouTube as part of the mobile provider's new "Binge On" video streaming program -- even though YouTube isn't part of the program |
InternetNews September 24, 2008 Judy Mottl |
Will Android's Low-Cost G1 Mean a Price War? A lower price tag and cheaper plans are aimed at helping T-Mobile nab more market share - but are wider industry implications ahead? |
InternetNews March 15, 2005 Roy Mark |
Data Brokers Back Federal Disclosure Law Lawmakers prod ChoicePoint, LexisNexis into supporting mandatory disclosure of security breaches. |
InternetNews June 9, 2009 Alex Goldman |
T-Mobile Hacked? Although a blog reported yesterday that T-Mobile was hacked, all the hackers actually seemed to have was a list of T-Mobile server names. |
CIO January 1, 2002 Stephanie Viscasillas |
Privacy Versus the FBI The antiterrorism law President Bush signed in late October makes it easier for officials investigating potential terrorist activity to get court orders to search companies' business records. It is important to take that into account in your privacy policy. |
InternetNews December 13, 2005 David Needle |
Sidekick II Users Can Upgrade Danger Danger, the mobile software and services company, is set to release a major software upgrade Tuesday for users of the T-Mobile Sidekick II handset. |
InternetNews October 21, 2009 |
FTC Reprimands ChoicePoint for Latest Data Breach Incident ChoicePoint agreed to pay $275,000 to redress consumers this week after the Federal Trade Commission said it failed to adequately safeguard one of its databases, an oversight that exposed the personal information of 13,750 people in 2008. |
InternetNews September 23, 2008 Erin Joyce |
T-Mobile's G1 Android Phone Has Arrived The open source Android platform officially joins the mobile operating system wars with a sleek entry. Memo to iPhone: You've got competition. |