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AOL gives four ISP's access to it's cable

me101   on 28 December 2001 - 14:16 · no comments & 185 views

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The US Federal Trade Commission on Thursday certified four providers of high-speed Internet service to compete on AOL Time Warner cable systems around the country, which fulfills the requirements that the FTC imposed on AOL prior to the purchase of Time Warner for $106.2 billion.

The four companies are :- Inter.net; New York Connect in the New York City area; Internet Junction in Tampa Bay and Central Florida; and STIC.NET in the San Antonio, Houston and Austin, Texas areas.

A spokeswoman for AOL said the company was pleased with the approval.

"Part of it (the deal) was to open up their backbone, but the fact that it's not just national players (they are choosing) shows that local providers can make it as well," said Andrew Coren, head of New York Connect.Net, of the AOL Time Warner open access pact.

News source: Reuters


Hack attacks

Atri Chatterjee, a spokesman for McAfee, said although a lot of people used stand-alone anti-virus programs many forgot to update them regularly, leaving them vulnerable to viruses that exploited recently found loopholes.

Even those who used a personal firewall to protect themselves and their computer from unwelcome intruders could be caught out by the sheer number of security vulnerabilities and patch programs that were reported every week, he said.

A study by anti-virus company MessageLabs found that the number of viruses circulating on the net has leapt in the last year.

In 2000, MessageLabs was stopping a virus every 700 e-mails. Now, the figure is one virus in every 370 messages.

Research has found that those who use broadband net connections are at real risk of attack from malicious hackers and computer vandals.

Because broadband connections are "always on", attackers typically have more time to find and try to penetrate computers linked to the net in this way.

Computers online via a broadband link have proved very popular with vandals who use them as proxies to carry out "denial of service attacks" in which a target machine is bombarded with bogus data packets.

Remote control

For £17.95 a year, McAfee will take on the burden of updating anti-virus software for customers to ensure that they stay protected against viruses.

For an extra £20.95 per annum, subscribers get a firewall managed remotely by McAfee that keeps out those that want to harvest personal information from a computer or recruit that machine for a future attack.

Both programs are updated, managed and monitored via the web by McAfee.

"Three out of four people are surfing naked and are open to all kinds of hacking attempts," said Mr Chatterjee.

The McAfee security subscription service has been running in the US since April 1999 and now has more than 1.2 million customers.

The service is available now in the UK and Germany and will be rolled out to 12 more countries in 2002.

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