Monday 14 September 2015

The new art of war: How trolls, hackers and spies are rewriting the rules of conflict

Subscription | Read Online | Previous Twitter Facebook Google+
Jason Hiner

Editor of this Newsletter

Jason Hiner | Global Editor in Chief, TechRepublic | @jasonhiner

I write about the products, people, and ideas that are revolutionizing business with technology. This newsletter is my picks for the top tech stories of the day.

The new art of war: How trolls, hackers and spies are rewriting the rules of conflict

Cyberwar isn't going to be about hacking power stations. It's going to be far more subtle, and more dangerous.

Cracking Open the Amazon Echo cloud-connected speaker

More from TechRepublic

Amazon Echo teardown: A smart speaker powered by Amazon's cloud

Nextbit Robin makes all other smartphones look dumb

Raspberry Pi and two other ARM servers show potential as VPS replacements

Don't underestimate the network's importance in manufacturing analytics and IoT

Filter data even faster with a custom filter technique in Excel

Unlocked Android phones are the future of the mobile landscape

Measuring the Pro in iPad Pro: The TechRepublic Podcast, episode 11

More from ZDNet

Moto X Pure Edition: First impressions of the low-cost Android flagship

My biggest problem with Windows 10: Instability

Microsoft delivers new Windows 10 Mobile test build, updated Photos app

GE forms GE Digital, aims to be top 10 software company

Microsoft sends out invitations for October 6 Windows 10 hardware blow-out

Apple Pay: More banks roll out Apple's pay-by-iPhone service

Spec check: New iPhone 6s, 6s Plus have 2 GB of RAM, iPad Pro uses 4 GB

Apple iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s Plus demand appears strong

Don't buy the 16GB Apple iPhone 6s

Clone wars: First Lenovo, now Dell is working on a Surface competitor

Microsoft buys Android lockscreen vendor Double Labs

Qualcomm buys Capsule Technologie, ups medical IoT game

iPhone 6s, iPad Pro, Apple TV: What I'm getting and what I'm not

How to tackle power-hungry Android apps and improve battery life for free

Less politics, more action: How CIOs can benefit from taking an interim role

South Africa gets first look at cybercrime bill that comes with 25-year jail terms

Don't miss this TechRepublic article

Survey: How rapidly does your IT department adapt?

Rapid change is part of the modern day IT department, but some companies are focused more on long-term projects than short-term change. Take Tech Pro Research's survey on fast IT and share your thoughts.

Featured multimedia

Cracking Open the Sphero BB-8 Star Wars toy

Photos: The Windows 10 laptops, 2-in-1 PCs and phones heading your way

TechRepublic newsletters

Get product reviews, tech news analysis, tips, and more in the following TechRepublic newsletters. Automatically sign up today!

Download

The Cloud Revolution

Download

Microsoft in the Enterprise

Download

Tech Decision Maker

Today's recommended downloads

Discover the Intel Data Analytics Acceleration Library

(Intel)

Data Center Projects: Advantages of Using a Reference Design

(APC by Schneider Electric)

Bandwidth Analyzer Pack: Your ONE network monitoring and traffic analysis tool

(SolarWinds)

Work the Way You Live

(Google App For Business)

Fighting today?s Advanced Attacks

(FORTINET)

Connect with TechRepublic

A Special Feature from TechRepublic and ZDNet

AI, Automation, and Tech Jobs

There are some things that machines are simply better at doing than humans, but humans still have plenty going for them. Here's a look at how the two are going to work in concert to deliver a more powerful future for IT, and the human race.

Visit the Subscription Center to get other free newsletters, manage your account settings or to be removed from TechRepublic communications.

The e-mail address for your subscription is habib2best@gmail.com.

Unsubscribe | Send Feedback | FAQ | Advertise | Privacy Policy

Copyright 2015 CBS Interactive, Inc. All rights reserved.

TechRepublic is a registered service mark of CBS Interactive, Inc.

TechRepublic

235 Second Street

San Francisco, CA 94105

U.S.A.

No comments:

Post a Comment