Feds charge professed White Hat hackers in breach of AT&T iPad customer data
Professed White Hat hackers face federal criminal charges for grabbing the e-mail addresses of 114,000 AT&T 3G customers who use iPads.
Professed White Hat hackers face federal criminal charges for grabbing the e-mail addresses of 114,000 AT&T 3G customers who use iPads.
NASA this week appointed Valarie Burks as its deputy CIO for Information Technology Security.
Passwords used by people employed by US federal, state and local governments were among those disclosed by the Gawker hack over the weekend, according to a report by PBS NewsHour on Monday.
There's a lot to watch in the nighttime sky -- everything from the International Space Station and meteor showers to planets and stars.
NASA is backing open source cloud computing with a single goal in mind: to stick to space exploration and stop running data centers.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is backing open source cloud computing with a long-term goal in mind: to get out of the data center business.
Vint Cerf, a co-designer of the Internet's TCP/IP protocols and considered a father of the Internet itself, emphasized the need for data portability standards for cloud computing during an appearance on Thursday evening.
How often do you go to make a call on your cellphone and you're stymied by a bad connection?
With the help of internet pioneer Vint Cerf, NASA has successfully tested its own deep space net.
Aware of a history of heart disease in his family, Gary F Thompson saw his doctor for a checkup before he ran a Los Angeles marathon in the mid-1990s.
Valuable mission data gathered by NASA's Apollo missions to the moon forty years ago looks like it may be recovered thanks to a donation of an ancient IBM tape drive by a Sydney computer society.
Forget trying to find evidence that there used to be water on Mars. Scientists from NASA said Monday that its instruments on the Red Planet have detected falling snow.
You need a lot of storage when you're snapping 100,000 photographs every half hour for nearly four years. That's the task ahead for NASA's Kepler Mission, which after launching in February 2009 will search for Earth-size planets by taking images of 100,000 solar systems over and over again through to 2012.
Technology developed by a New Zealand company could prove a massive help to emergency services, particularly in the event of a natural disaster.
A major upgrade to the core financial systems of the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has caused turbulence for end users and the agency’s inspector general.