Federal agencies embracing cloud-based document storage
Federal agencies embracing cloud-based document storage
Technology giant Google and its parent company, Alphabet, Inc. could soon be poised to pay billions of dollars in damages related to its use of Java programming code and a resulting copyright dispute with Oracle Corporation.
Java’s structural flaws have been openly laid bare on multiple occasions. Ineffective patching is typically the root cause of large-scale Java breaches such as these but what if mending porous code is not enough?
Considerable vulnerabilities still exist in the arena of open source software.
The data breach that caused CBP border checkpoints to reveal photos of individuals crossing the U.S.-Canada border turned out to be more serious than what was initially reported.
Some high-profile data breaches occurred in the first few weeks of June.
Determining whether or not to use Java can be difficult for some organizations, given the continued debates over its risk or lack thereof.
If you’re at all hesitant about joining the rising tide of firms that have implemented digital transformation and legacy modernization measures, you don’t need to be.
2018 may be consigned to the record books but the omnipresent specter of data security breaches is unlikely to diminish in the new year.
Java Magazine and Synk released a report in October 2018 that revealed some of the foundational issues that make Java such an unreliable digital dialect.