Backup and Recovery Best Practices for Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 with HP
This paper provides users in enterprise environments the data to effectively understand the options as well as the limitations of implementing online streaming backups into their infrastructure. »

 
Backup and Recovery Best Practices for SQL Server 2005, Including HP Data Protector
This paper helps users understand the options and the limitations of implementing backup and recovery in an enterprise environment using Linear Tape-Open tape, disk-to-disk, and virtual tape devices. Additionally, the paper discusses backup and recovery recommendations for the integration of Data Protector Software and Microsoft SQL Server 2005 and the impact on database performance and throughput for each of the backup methodologies. »

 
Best Practices for Microsoft Exchange 2007 with HP Server and Storage in Mid-range
This paper provides configuration and performance data, best practices, and recommendations to help system administrators deploy Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 on several of the HP MSA family of products. The results presented here are intended to help you perform pre-deployment planning and ensure adequate hardware and predictable performance for your specific business requirements. »

 
Optimizing HP Servers with Microsoft SQL Server 2008
This whitepaper discusses how SQL Server 2008, particularly 64-bit server configurations, together with the resources and technologies available on HP ProLiant and Integrity servers, offers a valid option for consolidating corporate data on one single device. »


Select a newsletter and click Join to sign up!
Internet Daily
InternetNews

Business Report

Boston News
DC News
NY News
SiliconValley News




Download: IBM Data Studio v1.1. Effectively design, develop, deploy and manage your data, databases, and database applications throughout the data management life.





ISPs Unite Against Spam

A new group, led by Openwave, aims to develop practices and technology to slow the flow of network-choking spam.

January 14, 2004

By Sean Michael Kerner

While lawmakers recently passed the Can-Spam act to control the spread of unwanted messages and malicious code, industry groups are trying to do their part too. The newest such group, the Messaging Anti-Abuse Working Group (MAAWG), was announced today.

Led by Openwave, the group includes telecoms and Internet service providers, including Abranet, Bell Canada, Bell South, Cox, Internet Initiative Japan, Telus and IIJ America. MAAWG's members represent 80 million subscribers and 40 million e-mail accounts.

MAAWG is the first step in an effort to align messaging industry stakeholders. MAAWG will plan actions for carrier-class spam protection, develop best practices and technology and present a unified point of view on public policy.

"We must move from reactive to proactive approaches to solving these issues and tackle this collaboratively to create a unified front to make systemic progress," Rich Wong, Openwave's general manager of messaging applications, said in a statement.

IP spoofing is a particular problem that the group will focus on. The latest Xombe attack and its predecessor SWEN have been particularly successful because they used spoofing techniques.

Spoofing makes spam or a DoS (define) attack appear to be coming from a different IP or e-mail address than the attacker's. In the Xombe and SWEN cases, the spam spoofs a Microsoft e-mail address to fool users into downloading a trojan.

Openwave is no stranger to partnerships of this kind. Last month, it allied with Brightmail to detect spam before it reached users' in-boxes.

Of course, MAAWG is not the only anti-spam industry group. In April, AOL, Yahoo and Microsoft formed their own anti-spam group. But it has yet to publish any specific proposals.

Microsoft has been widely criticized for security flaws in its programs that spammers continue to exploit.

MAAWG comes at opportune time as the global Spam and Virus onslaught appears likely to intensify this year.

"Spammers are united, sharing ideas and technology. We need to do the same thing -- to unite and aggressively raise the bar in our opposition," said Nick Jacobs, director of data services at NII Holdings, said in a MAAWG statement.

MAAWG will have a global summit in the spring to discuss progress and future steps.





Networking Archives | 7 Day InternetNews Summary | Back to top

Add internetnews.com
to your browser search box.

IE 7 | Firefox 2.0 | Firefox 1.5.x
Receive news
via our XML/RSS:
feed