Online safety risks are a truly global issue. Yet differences in threats vary significantly by country and other factors. Geographic differences give rise to important big-picture questions. For example, what level of online risk is involved as an ever greater percentage of the world’s population moves online and users seek out Web sites in their native languages? Are there relatively safer or riskier country domains? Should online consumers factor in this information when searching and surfing? Can the malicious Web be mapped in a way that is interesting and useful?
Posted on Tuesday, March 27th, 2007 at 5:13 pm and under category News.
You can read any responses through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can give a response, or trackback from your site.
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Search
Recent Posts
- Romney’s dog, Seamus, inspires book
- Internal Democratic polling shows dead heat in Wisconsin recall
- Romney was involved in ‘raping’ companies at Bain, top House Dem says
- Romney camp on whether government creates jobs: Yes and no
- “Politics and Pints”: The electronic edition!
- Artur Davis reportedly considering Republican House bid in Virginia
- CFTC investigates JPMorgan loss, argues against derivatives loophole abroad
Categories
Monthly Archives
- May 2012 (645)
- April 2012 (826)
- March 2012 (928)
- February 2012 (831)
- January 2012 (930)
- December 2011 (699)
- November 2011 (622)
- October 2011 (611)
- September 2011 (726)
- August 2011 (645)
- July 2011 (740)
- June 2011 (1161)
- July 2007 (2)
- March 2007 (2047)
- February 2007 (612)