TNT will use Verizon for its new global communications infrastructure, providing a network, conferencing service and security assistance for TNT employees to help customers, a Verizon news release said Monday. Verizon said it will create a high-capacity, secure, reliable network infrastructure to link TNT’s 3,000-plus hubs and depots worldwide.
The FCC Communications Security, Reliability and Interoperability Council meets March 18 for the last time under its current charter, the FCC said Monday. Three working groups are to offer reports: Working Group 3 on Emergency Alerting Systems, Working Group 4 on Cybersecurity Risk Management and Best Practices and Working Group 7 on Legacy System Best Practices, the agency said. The meeting starts at 1 p.m. EDT in the commission meeting room.
Identify theft was the top consumer complaint for the 15th consecutive year in the FTC’s national ranking of complaints. The agency released its 2014 consumer complaint data book Friday. “While identity theft remains a huge issue, consumers should also keep a close eye out for imposter scams,” Jessica Rich, Bureau of Consumer Protection director, said in a separate news release. “Whether it’s pretending to be the IRS during tax season, or making false promises of a lottery win, scammers are increasingly sophisticated in their efforts to deceive consumers, but the FTC will continue working to shut these scammers down.” “Debt collection” ranked No. 2 on the list; “imposter scams,” No. 3, it said.
The IT Alliance for Public Sector saw a 25 percent increase in membership over the past few months with the addition of companies such as Adobe, Boeing, Honeywell and Lenovo, said a blog post Thursday from parent group Information Technology Industry Council. ITAPS, which began in late 2013, represents more than 30 tech entities.
The FCC Media Bureau requested comments on a rulemaking on expanding to broadcast radio licensees, cable operators, satellite radio licensees and satellite TV providers the requirement for public inspection files to be posted on the commission's online database, the bureau said in a public notice Monday. Comments are due March 16, replies April 14.
The day after NSA Director Mike Rogers said again that technology companies have a responsibility to create a “framework” that would let the agency access data and communications, even if encrypted, the Electronic Frontier Foundation questioned whether President Barack Obama’s administration truly believes the rule of law is important. During a cybersecurity conference at the New America Foundation on Monday, Rogers said the tech community should allow the NSA access, despite repeated warnings from security experts that limiting “backdoor” access to only “good guys” is not actually possible. A blog post Tuesday by EFF Staff Attorney Nate Cardozo and EFF Global Policy Analyst Eva Galperin said that “once you build a backdoor (even if you call it something else) you can't be sure who will walk through it. And there's plenty of evidence that governments, especially the Chinese government, target law enforcement backdoors in technology products in order to gain the same level of access to user data (without legal oversight) that the NSA is so keen to get for itself.” Yahoo Chief Information Security Officer Alex Stamos asked Rogers during Monday’s panel discussion whether the tech company, which has 1.3 billion users worldwide, also should create a backdoor for the Chinese, Russian, Saudi Arabian, Israeli and French governments as well. Rogers acknowledged the “international implications” but said, “I think we can work our way through this.” Why should "we believe that other countries would follow that legal framework and not simply ignore that framework and attack the law enforcement access point?” EFF asked. “If the rule of law is as important as we all apparently agree, this is a great opportunity for the Obama Administration to tell the courts here that intercepts may only be accomplished with actual legal process,” EFF said. “Until then, it's hard to take seriously the Administration's magical thinking: that a technological security hole -- as Stamos put it, ‘like drilling a hole in the windshield’ -- can be protected by a ‘framework.’ The only thing we can trust is math, and the strong encryption that implements it.” The White House had no immediate comment.
Apple will spend 1.7 billion euros ($1.93 billion) to build and operate two new data centers in Denmark and Ireland that will be 100 percent powered by renewable energy, the company said Monday. The facilities will run Apple’s online services, including the iTunes Store and the App Store, for customers across Europe, it said. “Apple will also work with local partners to develop additional renewable energy projects from wind or other sources to provide power in the future.” Both facilities are expected to begin operations in two years, Apple said.
Zayo completed its $675 million acquisition of Latisys's operating units Monday, said the acquirer in a news release. The deal adds eight facilities to Zayo’s data center strategic product group, zColo, and gives it presence in four new markets in Ashburn, Virginia; Denver; Orange County, California; and London.
Verizon invested $17.2 billion in network infrastructure in 2014, putting the company near the top of the list of private investors in U.S. technology, said the carrier in a news release Monday. Over the past three years, the company made more than $50 billion in such investments, and information on these and other figures is in the company's latest 10-K SEC form.
Enterprise adoption of the Internet of Things is still "relatively low" but “starting to gain momentum,” said an ABI Research report commissioned by Verizon Enterprise Solutions. The number of business-to-business IoT connections will quadruple between 2014 and 2020, rising to 5.4 billion connections globally, said the report. Social media and mobile technology are transforming consumer and citizen expectations about IoT, and the dropping costs of sensors, connectivity and processing power are making IoT a more viable proposition to a broader set of organizations, it said. An improving economy has brought new entrants in the enterprise market that are using IoT as a “roadmap to improve their customers' experiences, accelerate growth and create new business models that are driving societal innovation,” said Mark Bartolomeo, Verizon vice president-IoT Connected Solutions. In the automotive industry, 14 car manufacturers with 80 percent of the worldwide market have a connected car strategy, Verizon said. More than 13 million health and fitness tracking devices will be introduced in the workplace by 2018 as part of employer-sponsored wellness programs to help reduce the cost of healthcare, it said, and by 2025 smart cities capabilities will become a “critical consideration” for companies deciding where to invest and open facilities, “due to their impact on operating costs and talent availability." Verizon saw 45 percent year-over-year revenue growth in its IoT business in 2014, with 4G LTE activations growing 135 percent, the company said. Verizon estimates just 10 percent of enterprises have deployed IoT technologies extensively. That indicates many organizations “are in a pilot phase or are waiting for more insights from early adopters,” said the company, including the automotive market. More than 600 million vehicles worldwide aren't connected to a network, according to Verizon data. While the core technologies powering IoT -- sensors, cloud computing and intelligent networking -- are familiar to most businesses and public sector organizations, formulating a viable strategy and developing IoT solutions can be highly complex, said Bartolomeo. "There's still a lot more work to be done” in creating and ratifying standards, he said. "As machine-to-machine technology adoption continues to move downstream with millions of endpoints connected, it will change how we see cybersecurity and privacy." Verizon’s role is to “help key decision makers tackle complexities like security head-on by encouraging a more proactive posture in order to create value for their organizations while reducing potential risk," the company said.