Microsoft in a response late Thursday rejected assertions that it has put in a security “backdoor” at the request of the National Security Agency. The denial comes after the NSA’s information assurance lead, Richard Schaeffer, told a US Senate terrorism subcommittee that the agency had worked with Microsoft to improve Windows 7′s “security guide” and sparked fears that the government had deliberately left a secret window the NSA could use to spy on users….
Proton and Yes team as much as offer Malaysia’s first 4G-connected car, promise more to return
FCC thinks ISPs should do a wiser job preventing fraud, theft



