Java developers remain bullish despite security problems

Encryption algorithm with 'sponge construction' picked to succeed SHA-2 | How to get your IT team ready for the cloud

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Java developers remain bullish despite security problems
Java's recent security woes are not scaring off developers, who don't see Java as any more vulnerable than any other platform. "There's nothing fundamentally wrong with Java," says Gonzalo Diethelm, in charge of architecture and development at the Chilean central security depository, DCV. Read More


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Encryption algorithm with 'sponge construction' picked to succeed SHA-2
Bringing to a close a five-year selection process, the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has selected the successor to the encryption algorithm that is used today to secure much of the information on the Internet. For SHA-3 (Secure Hash Algorithm), NIST has selected Keccak (pronounced "catch-ack"), an algorithm authored by Guido Bertoni, Joan Daemen, and Gilles Van Assche of STMicroelectronics, as well as Michaël Peeters of NXP Semiconductors. Read More

How to get your IT team ready for the cloud
So you received word that cloud is now a priority for your organization. The challenge is how do you get your team cloud-ready? "The cloud is changing so rapidly there's no book you can buy to get up to speed," says Ross Lambert, software architect and development lead for electricity storage provider Demand Energy Networks. Read More




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