• ICO increases data controller fee to £500
  • Suncorp to adopt PeopleSoft as a service from Infosys
  • HDS, EMC out as Suncorp cuts storage costs by 40% with NetApp cloud play
  • FIRST LOOK: Microsoft Security Essentials
  • Firewalls fall down in social networks and P2P
  • Firms warned to guard data on extended networks
  • Cisco’s Morrison Talks UCS from Networkers
  • UK slips down broadband world leaderboard
  • Broadband group presses VOA on network tax
  • Freeview re-tune websites crash under demand
  • Start-ups rival SAP and Oracle with cheap software support
  • IT causes 14,000 NHS patient waiting list backlog
  • Politicians gain control of the internet
  • Information security threat modeling is immature in India
  • SEBI prescribes CISA audits for mutual fund players
  • Blog awards 2009 badges
  • Microsoft Security Essentials: New Microsoft freeware not fazing security software companies
  • HP and EMC gang up on NetApp over FAS benchmarks, Emulex bashes Brocade and EMC vs. HDS continues
  • IT could cut global energy bill by $900bn, says ITU
  • HP climbs Greenpeace IT ranking with toxin-free PC
  • Huddle connects to iPhone and MS Office
  • Microsoft boss Steve Ballmer takes a pay cut
  • School saves £17,000 a year on IT
  • HP revives plans to combine PC and printer businesses
  • ITU identity standards could end multiple passwords
  • Online advertising overtakes TV for the first time
  • Microsoft wins $388m patent verdict reversal
  • US web users say no to online tracking by advertisers
  • Smart Trojans used to ransack bank accounts
  • Storage roundup: Mimecast helps Salvation Army, StorMagic boosts channel network and more
  • Oxford Archaeology CIO not buying dedupe hype; finds open storage more valuable technology
  • Demystifying the information security consultant selection process
  • Get your data center power infrastructure to size
  • Bosses have their heads in the sand over new technology
  • Europe may ask Enisa to coordinate network security
  • No compulsory ID cards in next Parliament, says Brown
  • Download Microsoft Security Essentials today
  • Roman Polanski search results could be poison, Webroot warns
  • Tesco deploys green software to track carbon emissions
  • Top interviewing tips: Part 8 - how to handle your first interview
  • Cybersecurity experts agree to share attack forensics
  • Microsoft under increased pressure to fix SMB2 security flaw
  • CIOs are followers, not leaders
  • iPhone available from Vodafone in 2010
  • Bletchley Park eyes millions in lottery funding
  • DVLA denies selling data to Castrol
  • Start-ups challenge Oracle and SAP maintenance services
  • Microsoft releases free Security Essentials software
  • Dell's ARM chip PCs to deliver instant start-up
  • Most UK SMBs rely on free security software, survey reveals
  • Information security awareness campaigns: Time to make it lively
  • Virtual desktops: the pros and cons
  • 3Par rides the VMware wave
  • Media campaign for ID cards costing £544,000
  • Small business overconfident of ability to survive IT disasters
  • Virgin Media seeks London listing
  • Xerox changes its game with $6.4bn ACS buy
  • Swarming intelligence guides US IT security research
  • IBM pension plans mean 'pain for employees' says union
  • Government covers up Valuation Office security failures
  • Net neutrality in Europe to be decided at dinner tonight
  • 422 million homes will have broadband by the end of the year
  • AT&T slams Google over Google Voice
  • Rofl Twitter attack moves into Facebook
  • Local government unprepared for internet says Socitim boss
  • CIOs look to context-aware computing for growth
  • McAfee joins Adobe for data security software
  • EC to demand quieter MP3 players
  • Orange confirms it will sell the iPhone
  • Post-masters form action group after accounts shortfall
  • Logistics firm adds disaster recovery in the cloud
  • Complacent consumers allow cybercrime, phishing attacks to flourish
  • Research aims to fight crime with network processor technology
  • Continuous data protection (CDP) fits the bill for unstructured data protection needs
  • Radiation might block trips to Mars – or anywhere else
  • UK opens cyberspook school
  • Computers to mark exam papers
  • Video: TurboHercules legitimises IBM mainframe emulation
  • Password theft shoots up as attacks mature, says McAfee
  • Blackberry-maker RIM faces tough third quarter
  • BT cuts broadband prices and aims to reach 20 million homes
  • HP predicts market rebound in 2010
  • US court delays approval of Google Books deal
  • ID card project moves into next phase ahead of schedule
  • Tories blame government for cyber threats
  • UKTI urges firms to engage India's IT market
  • BMC and McAfee join forces on security compliance
  • Gmail users dogged by technical problems – again
  • Twitter valued at $1bn
  • Green cloud from Microsoft's Dublin datacentre
  • HM Treasury to spend £50m on Fujitsu technology refresh
  • Reliance Communications' IT infrastructure backed bid for GSM services
  • Department of Defence seeks 20 "Supermicro Servers"
  • Interview: BCS CEO plots the evolution of the IT industry
  • UK managers do not understand SAM risks
  • Red Hat profits continue to defy recession
  • Retailers, publishers to win from shoppers at Vodafone 360
  • 'Poisoned chalice' fear of SROs on big IT projects
  • FBI database holds records on 1.5 billion people
  • HP buries EDS brand
  • More