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Promoting the Eastern Europe film festival.
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Submitted By: flyer1111
Tags: chicken lady film festival
Organizations that experience data breaches are paying more than ever to recover from the incidents and retain customers once the events become public knowledge, according to a new research report.
In its third annual study into the financial impact of data breaches, Ponemon Institute reports the episodes are costing an average of $197 per lost or stolen customer record during 2007, a slight bump from the figure of $182 per exposed record that it tracked one year ago, and a significant gain over the estimate of $128 per record that the research firm published in its initial 2005 survey.
Based on interviews conducted with 35 organizations that experienced data incidents in the last year, the Ponemon study found the average total cost of the breaches rose to $6.3 million in 2007, compared to an average of $4.8 million in 2006.
The average number of records exposed in the breaches Ponemon studied was roughly 20,000 per incident, although among those organizations surveyed the incidents ranged from as few as 4,000 records to more than 125,000 records.
One of the issues driving the continued escalation of data breach remediation expenses, according to the research, is the estimated cost of lost business and so-called customer churn that results from notification of the episodes.
Ponemon said the impact of customer churn and the amount of money necessary to acquire new business grew to an average of $128 per misplaced or stolen record in 2007, roughly a 30 percent increase over the figure of $98 per record published in last year's study.
Among the other expenses facing organizations that suffer data incidents are monies spent to provide customer support and credit monitoring services to affected individuals, along with budgets allocated for advertising and marketing efforts aimed at repairing companies' public images.
However, while the cost of breaches has continued to rise, the research company contends that many organizations have improved their ability to react to the events.
Even those firms who have experienced repeated incidents seem to have woken up to the idea of planning ahead and trying to prepare for the situation, said Dr. Larry Ponemon, the research firm's founder and chairman.
"We're finding that organizations seem to be better prepared with response plans, especially those that have experienced more than one breach, which was more than half of the people we interviewed," Ponemon said. "Companies have found that some of the tactics they used several years ago to respond didn't work out like they had imagined, and they're trying to find the most effective ways to retain customers while driving down costs."
For instance, said Ponemon, many companies affected by breaches in prior years attempted to curry favor with their customers by handing out gift coupons for their products or services.
Those efforts didn't have the desired impact on the issue of customer turnover, while most of the coupons were eventually redeemed, driving related expenses even higher. As such, most organizations have abandoned the approach in favor of other tactics, including spending more money on recruiting new customers, he said.
Companies have also found that most customers do not utilize the credit monitoring services organizations frequently offer in the wake of a breach to help people monitor their records for potential fraud, the expert maintains. By scaling back those offers and spending more money on image control, organizations have been able to cut some costs, he said.
As a result, the average cost of notifying customers of a data breach actually dropped significantly -- or roughly 40 percent -- falling from $25 per lost record one year ago to $15 in 2007, according to the report -- which was co-sponsored by security vendors PGP and Vontu.
Another emerging area of focus for companies dealing with data breaches has been to force their business partners to do a better job of protecting their customer data.
Some 40 percent of those organizations interviewed attributed the cause of their incidents to third parties, such as contractors and consultants, representing a nearly 30 percent increase over 2006.
Those breaches were also more costly than other episodes, averaging an overall expense of $231 per record, compared to $171 per records in incidents when third parties were not involved.
In terms of vertical bias, Ponemon said that financial services companies are feeling the biggest pinch from their breaches, based largely on customer perceptions that such organizations should do a better job of protecting their data than other types of businesses, including retailers.
Financial services companies are particularly concerned with the issue of having customers abandon their online applications in favor of more traditional brick-and-mortar services, thereby driving up their overhead expenses.
Despite the fact that the cost of responding to a data breach has risen consistently over the three years that Ponemon has studied the phenomenon, the expert believes that in time the price of losing customer data will eventually fall.
The researcher said that the sheer volume of incidents will drive customers to become desensitized to the events, resulting in lowered remediation costs and business churn.
"People are already finding that it is hard to trace an incident of ID theft to a specific breach, and with the growing number of notifications they receive, they won't care as much about the problem," Ponemon said. "There seems to be a herd mentality emerging among customers that applies to the law of large numbers; if people feel they are in a pool of millions of others who have had their records stolen or lost, their thinking is that the probability of being victimized isn't as strong."
This adorable hand-turkey is supposedly from future White House Chief of Staff/fingerless freak Rahm Emanuel. Happy Holidays! [Eric Spiegelman]
Filed under: Peripherals
Conceptually simple hack turns VGA port into power-only USB socket originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Nov 2008 08:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Read | Permalink | Email this | CommentsFiled under: Programming, Web

I'm one of those suckers who really loves a good holiday episode of a TV show. Whether it's Friends or The Simpsons or The West Wing, I get all choked up when a couple gets together or a family learns the true meaning of Christmas and a carol is played at the end. I still remember the Christmas episodes on Guiding Light in the 80s, with Nick visiting and helping out Philip and Beth and Rick and other Springfield citizens. (Wow, not only do I love Christmas on TV, I love Christmas on soap operas...yikes).
AOL has a 10 question quiz about Christmas TV. How much do you know about The Wonder Years, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, and Home Improvement? This is the best I've ever scored on one of these AOL quizzes. I got 9 out of 10. Damn you, Grey's Anatomy!
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Filed under: Spoilers Anonymous

Continue reading Spoilers Anonymous
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(:60)
Branding Anthem for Haagen Dazs Strawberry Ice CreamFiled under: Culture, Microsoft Xbox 360, Action, Adventure, Online, Competitive Gaming, Fashion

SPONSORED BY: Age of Empires III - Real-Time Strategy Game Control a European power on a quest to colonize and conquer the New World. AOE3 introduces new gameplay elements, as well as new civilizations, units, and technologies. http://www.ageofempires3.com/
Filed under: Nintendo GameCube, Portable, Nintendo Wii, Action, Adventure, Video
SPONSORED BY: Age of Empires III - Real-Time Strategy Game Control a European power on a quest to colonize and conquer the New World. AOE3 introduces new gameplay elements, as well as new civilizations, units, and technologies. http://www.ageofempires3.com/
Filed under: Comedy, Music & Musicals, New Releases, MGM, Theatrical Reviews, New in Theaters, The Weinstein Co.

In Soul Men, Mac plays Floyd Henderson, one third of a legendary 1960s soul music trio. In the 1970s, the group's lead singer Marcus Hooks (played in flashbacks and photos by John Legend) embarked upon a solo career, leaving Floyd and his bandmate Louis Hinds (Samuel L. Jackson) in the lurch. They tried to continue alone, but quickly broke up due to "creative differences," i.e. they fought over a woman. Now Marcus has passed away and Floyd and Louis have been invited to perform in a tribute show at the Apollo. And since Louis doesn't fly, they must drive cross-country, which gives them plenty of time to fight and bicker. (Isaac Hayes appears relatively briefly, as himself, at the tribute.)
Continue reading Review: Soul Men
Filed under: Home Entertainment, Portable Audio
Got a good marketing hook? Great, give it a nice thick slather across some related bits of your consumer electronics and prepare to rake in the cash. With MD and SACD formats not exactly dominating the audio masses, Sony's back with a new format by the name Blu-spec CD. It takes advantage of (you guessed it) Sony's Blu-ray Disc technology to press new high-quality discs while somehow maintaining compatibility with regular ol' red-laser CD players. How? No idea, really -- it's some kind of secret, proprietary Sony magic hidden deep inside of Google's Japanese-to-English language translator. Perhaps an English press release will be issued later in the day. It does seem that Sony will kick out about 60 Blu-spec CD classics (Miles Davis' Kind of Blue for example) in December ranging in prices from ¥2,500 (about $25) to ¥4,200 ($42). Ouch.Sony turns CDs blue with new Blu-spec CD standard originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Nov 2008 01:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Read | Permalink | Email this | CommentsInteresting. The publishers of the definitive books on Google Web Toolkit, Addison-Wesley and Prentice Hall, are now launching a conference on the subject - the Voices That Matter: Google Web Toolkit Conference!
The conference is a collaboration of the Google engineers, and the open source community of contributors and developers and will discuss GWT topics ranging from introductory to advanced. The conference will take place at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco, CA from December 3-6, 2007 and features an exciting lin-up of speakers including Bruce Johnson, Joel Webber, Ryan Dewsbury, Scott Blum, David Geary, Kelly Norton, and others.
Take a look at the event web site - some great stuff here.
http://www.voicesthatmatter.com/gwt2007/index.html

Mindless Self Indulgence's cover of Bring the Pain by Method Man over a series of movie clips.
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Submitted By: ug7344
Tags: method the man Pain bring mindless indulgence self
I hope i make this easy enough for you. If not tell me.( full screen will show you everything cleary) Ranked 2.94 / 5 | 0 views | No comments
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Submitted By: Dragon Sky66
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how make computer faster
Mixtape Monday Video: 50 Cent, Pharrell & More
Plus: Tony Yayo and DJ Whoo Kid take us behind the scenes of <i>S.O.D.,</i> and Talib Kweli and Juelz Santana hint at a "secret project."
The Diceman gets into it with Wendy Williams and her sidekick in an interview from The Wendy Williams Experience.
Runtime: 5 min 2 sec
For example, a supply-chain application that lists vendors could be written so running a mouse over the name tells their presence status and clicking on the name calls them on the phone. The supply-chain application would interface direct with SIP Application Server, which would interact with the presence server and the call server to enable the features.





