website design company
123webguru, International Business Machines is introducing software today that is intended to let companies share and compare information with other companies or government agencies without identifying the people connected to it.

website designHomeSite MapContact usWe are the best website design and development company
Custom web designProfessional , custom , best website web design company

Professional  custom web site design company Ecommerce website design and development
Best in the web
Website design company
We are the Best
Custom website design

website design 123webguru News Desk

BBC News

I.B.M. Software Aims to Provide Security Without Sacrificing Privacy

International Business Machines is introducing software today that is intended to let companies share and compare information with other companies or government agencies without identifying the people connected to it.

Security specialists familiar with the technology say that, if truly effective, it could help tackle many security and privacy problems in handling personal information in fields like health care, financial services and national security.

"There is real promise here," said Fred H. Cate, director of the Center for Applied Cybersecurity Research at Indiana University. "But we'll have to see how well it works in all kinds of settings."

The technology for anonymous data-matching has been under development by S.R.D. (Systems Research and Development), a start-up company that I.B.M. acquired this year.

Much of the company's early financial backing came from In-Q-Tel, a venture capital firm financed by the Central Intelligence Agency that invests in companies whose technologies have government security uses.

S.R.D., now I.B.M.'s Entity Analytics unit, has worked for years on specialized software for quickly detecting relationships within vast storehouses of data. Its early market was in Las Vegas, where casinos used the company's technology to help prevent fraud or employee theft. The matching software might sift through databases of known felons, for example, to find any links to casino employees.

By the late 1990's, United States intelligence agencies had discovered S.R.D. and the potential to use its technology for winnowing leads in pursuing terrorists or spies. After 9/11, the government's interest increased, and today most of the company's business comes from government contracts.

The new product goes beyond finding relationships in different sets of data. The software, which I.B.M. calls DB2 Anonymous Resolution, enables companies or government agencies to share personal information on customers or citizens without identifying them.

For example, say the government were looking for suspected terrorists on cruise ships. The government had a "watch list," but it did not want to give that list to a cruise line, fearing it might leak out. Similarly, the cruise lines did not want to hand over their entire customer lists to the government, out of privacy concerns.

The I.B.M. software would convert data on a person into a string of seemingly random characters, using a technique known as a one-way hash function. No names, addresses or Social Security numbers, for example, would be embedded within the character string.

The strings would be fed through a program to detect a matching pattern of characters. In the case of the cruise line and the government, an alert would be sent to both sides that a match had been detected.

You can also check :
website design company Top News
website design company News of the Week

"But what you get is a message that there is a match on record Number 678 or whatever, and then the government can ask the cruise line for that specific record, not a whole passenger list," explained Jeff Jonas, the founder of S.R.D. and now chief scientist of I.B.M.'s Entity Analytics unit. "What you get is discovery without disclosure."

To date, the software for anonymously sharing and matching data has been tested in a few projects, but I.B.M. is aiming for day-to-day use in several industries.

In health care, for example, more secure and anonymous handling of patient information could alleviate privacy concerns in the shift to electronic health records, potentially increasing efficiency and reducing costs, analysts said.

The technology, specialists noted, could also reduce the risk of identity theft, especially if personal data held by companies were made anonymous.

News Source
http://www.nytimes.com


website design Top News

website design News of the Week

website design All News

 

Website design company


Website design company

123webguru Articles

Some Common mistakes while website designing
While designing website one is tempted to overuse the content in order to attract the visitors. E.g. using eye catchy graphics is favorable but too much ...

Website development for consumers
All website companies target the consumer companies in order to expand their business and grow. Ever since internet got wide spread, the exposure to global ...

35 Deadly Website Sins That will Kill Your Business!
After reviewing thousands of web sites over the years, I have come to the conclusion that many business web sites are missing the boat. For example, ...

Getting indexed
Getting indexed Search engines do not always include all web pages from a web site. Usually they will only include a sample of your pages - the ones they ...

Some facts behind logo design
Before you create logo for your company or alter the one that you are currently having, one thing to keep in mind is that the your company logo gives the ...

Simple website design
It is a fact that world’s most commercial web sites are unadorned, uncomplicated, hazard free to use. The best example in this regard will be if we site ...

Website design company

 

custom
123webguru.com :  Website design company

123webguru News

Toshiba to make Microsoft's Zune
Microsoft says Japanese firm Toshiba will make its Zune portable music player, due out later this year.

Bugged bins to promote recycling
Chips in bins which help councils charge for rubbish collections could be common across the UK within two years.

Stem cell 'wonder cures' warning
Patients should beware of so-called stem cell wonder cures as most have not been properly tested, experts say.

Google to target software market
Search engine Google is entering the software market, in a move that pits it against Microsoft.

Nasa moves shuttle indoors
Nasa decides to haul the Atlantis orbiter indoors to protect it from Tropical Storm Ernesto.

website design News of the Week

Website design company

 

Free Price Quotes



Are you looking for :

Ecommerce website | Real estate website | Database driven website | Web base Application | Full Flash website | Sitemap | Flash application | Logo design | SEO | Website design company | Web programming | Website redesign and redevelopment | Development of new website | Start a new website | Custom website design

123webguru.com, A new web division of Microsec Technologies Ltd.
© 2002-2005
Website design company, All Rights Reserved
Disclaimer | Privacy policy

Website design company