Drupal, Joomla! found vulnerable
IBM and Websense are separately issuing their semi-annual security trend reports, and the picture isn't pretty for Web sites, open source software and social networking programs, says CIO.com.
When it comes to the Top Ten worst offenders in terms of vulnerabilities, big players like IBM, Microsoft, Apple, Sun, Cisco, Oracle and IBM continue to make the list.
But this is the first time that community-developed open source software such as the Drupal and Joomla! content-management software packages for the Web also showed up on the list.
JPMorgan chooses Oracle
JPMorgan Chase, a global financial services firm, will implement Oracle Distributed Document Capture across its global enterprise, says Earth Times.
JPMorgan Chase expects to benefit from faster document cycle times, improved regulatory compliance and records management, more automated business processes, and better access to information.
Oracle Distributed Document Capture initially will be rolled out to more than 750 US users at JPMorgan Chase. By the end of 2009, more than 3 000 employees across the US, Europe, Africa and Asia are expected to be using the software.
AMCOM makes coffee
AMCOM International, an IT solutions, training and consultancy company has launched a content management system called Coffee, says AME Info.
Coffee can refresh Web sites and portals easily through its content updating tool, and provides a light-weight Web-based user interface.
Other features include built in search engine, content syndication (RSS feeds), media library and an advanced notification and tracking tool with scheduled publishing and easy to rollback facility.
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