Friday, July 20, 2012

Cyber Threats

WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 17:  U.S. President Bar...
WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 17: U.S. President Barack Obama makes a statement on the worsening nuclear crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in northeastern Japan March 17, 2011 at the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, DC. Obama said that harmful level of radiation is not expected to reach to the U.S. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
Barack Obama: Taking the Cyberattack Threat Seriously
Taking down vital banking systems could trigger a financial crisis. The lack of clean water or functioning hospitals could spark a public health emergency. And as we've seen in past blackouts, the loss of electricity can bring businesses, cities and entire regions to a standstill. ..... Nuclear power plants must have fences and defenses to thwart a terrorist attack. Water treatment plants must test their water regularly for contaminants. Airplanes must have secure cockpit doors. We all understand the need for these kinds of physical security measures. It would be the height of irresponsibility to leave a digital backdoor wide open to our cyber adversaries. .... a society that cherishes free enterprise and the rights of the individual. ..... reflects the insights and ideas of industry and civil libertarians. It is sponsored by a bipartisan group of senators. It is supported by current and former homeland security, intelligence and defense leaders from both Republican and Democratic administrations
Cyber security gaps are the chink in the armor. I compare it to mental health. So many of mild mental health issues go unreported. Similarly numerous low level cyber attacks are pushed under the carpet. There is a basic unpreparedness right now.
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Hope


Yahoo: Tech Or Content

Yahoo! Art
Yahoo! Art (Photo credit: Kapil Karekar)
Yahoo Needs a New Technology
Every month, more than 700 million people around the world visit Yahoo's sites .... Yahoo's U.S. audience is second only to Google's, and larger than those of Microsoft and Facebook. ...... much of it may come from the outside, too, both from hiring promising tech executives and acquiring hot startups—two things that could be easier now given Mayer's cachet. .... Yahoo has struggled to decide whether it's a technology or a media company.
The fundamental shift Yahoo has to make with Mayer at the helm is to go back to being a technology company. That is a tall task. Yahoo is not in as bad a shape as Apple was when Steve Jobs took over. But it sure has suffered major brand damage over the years.

Good content is good news, great content is great news, but Yahoo fundamentally has to go back to being a technology company.


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Bol Bachchan

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Corporations Are People

jack welch
jack welch (Photo credit: challengefuture)
Jack And Suzy Welch: It's True: Corporations Are People
Buildings don't hire people. Buildings don't design cars that run on electricity or discover DNA-based drug therapies that target cancer cells in ways our parents could never imagine...... Buildings don't show up at a customer's factory and say, "We won't leave until we solve your inventory problem." Buildings don't encourage their employees to mentor inner-city kids in math and science. Buildings don't fund homeless shelters in Boston or health clinics in Rwanda. People do. ...... people in corporations do indeed love and cry and dance. If you don't know that, you've never been part of a team that has pulled together over coffee and late nights and shouting and laughing and created something amazing to hit a deadline. You've never been in the room when a longtime client says it's not working anymore and she's taking her business to your biggest competitor. You've never sat in the lunch room when someone runs in and says the new medical device that no one thought had a chance, the little heart valve or something like it that every engineer in the place has been working on for two years, has just passed its first human clinical trials with flying colors.
It is not either or. I believe in entrepreneurship and in market forces. But there is also a place for government action. And there are spots where both have consistently failed.
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