Broadvox GO!Services - Web Hosting, Business Email, & Ecommerce
Broadvox GO!Services encompasses four separate product groupings: Business Web Hosting, Business Email, ECommerce and Professional Services. Each ...
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Broadvox GO!Services encompasses four separate product groupings: Business Web Hosting, Business Email, ECommerce and Professional Services. Each ...
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352 pages |
How To Do Everything With Email,Spam & Viruses |
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About this book The Internet and email has become a communications bonanza, allowing people to socialize, do business, shop, and enhance their education just about anywhere there is a computer. As convenient as all this communication is, it also creates piles of electron |
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375 pages |
Strategies for Web hosting and managed services As opposed to the recommendations just given for larger businesses, if you've outsourced all of your Internet services including web hosting and email to a ... |
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About this book Arms IT professionals with a complete blueprint for developing successful Web hosting strategies Written by a consultant who helped develop the Web hosting strategies at many of today's top e-commerce vendors, this book fills in IT professionals on the full range of services available. The book provides decision-makers with criteria checklists and other useful tools they need for determining what they need, why they need it, how to find it, and how to evaluate and manage it. Doug Kaye provides a clear, complete roadmap for building an effective Web hosting strategy, and offers practical advice and answers to critical questions. The book covers important topics, including the real cost of bandwidth, domain name services, shared versus dedicated servers, backup and recovery, service-level agreements, security, negotiating with and managing vendors, and hardware maintenance and support. Companion Web site includes links to Web hosting directories, tools for evaluating hosting services, and... |
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Take control of your domain names I suggest asking these questions of yourself and of the potential email hosting firm. Finding these answers at an email host's Web site or via their ... |
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388 pages |
The complete idiot's guide to the Internet You'll use a mail program to download your mail from there. If you plan to set up a Web site with a Web-hosting company, you can register the domain to that ... |
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About this book The Complete Idiots Guide to the Internet 7th Edition makes sense of this Web World. From an Internet overview, through email and browsers, newsgroups, web multimedia, doing business online, staying safe on the Internet and more, this book untangles it all, and makes the most of your Internet navigation. |
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100 Steps for Improving Your Website and eBusiness - Effective Tips for Building a Better Web Business Many free web hosting services do not provide email accounts for your website domain. In this case you must use another email service, a free email account, ... |
The holiday season is critical to any customer-focused business – this year, more than ever. For start-ups, it can literally be a matter of life and death. Online shopping is expected to grow notably this year – so if you find yourself a victim of hackers, the fate of your company is very much in the balance.
When critical customer data (such as credit card information) is compromised, you have a 48 hour window that’s critical to getting your business back online, on track, and on safe ground.
Should your company fall victim to hackers this year, there are two important things to remember: Transparency and communication. It’s not just about restoring your Web site to a secure state but restoring your customer’s confidence to continue to shop with you.
Here’s how to handle things:
Step 1: Announce and assess (Timeframe: Immediately – 12 hours after the breach is discovered)
Immediately, get your site offline. Google has some specific recommendations regarding the best way to accomplish this.
Customers appreciate being notified as soon as possible, and they would rather hear it from you first. Plus, being the first to report the cyber crime lets you control the message. Concurrently, make a general public statement about what has happened and instruct all individuals (or companies) who have done business with your company to monitor their credit report and banking statements for inconsistencies.
Deliver the statement to all concerned parties via email and make sure to train all customer-facing representatives with the appropriate dialogue. Here’s a concise and effective example from Balmar Incorporated.
Step 2: Conduct a deeper investigation (Timeframe: 12 hours – 36 hours+)
Computer forensic auditors, PCI representatives, governmental agencies and others may be involved in the process depending on the nature of your business.
Start by interviewing all personnel responsible for securing your environment and find out if they are aware of any known vulnerabilities. Next, begin reviewing log files with the following specific goals in mind: Identifying the date(s) of the breach, how many customers were compromised and what information was stolen.
Step 3: Notifications and remediation (Timeframe: 36 hours – 48 hours – or as soon as you’ve pinpointed the problem)
Contact the police, FBI, and Attorney General with all the details you’ve compiled about the situation. This may sound severe, but forty-five states have enacted legislature that dictates who should be notified , and how, when personally identifiable information is leaked, and these governmental agencies will direct you on what information to divulge and what to keep private for their investigation. Government agencies are taking cybercrime very seriously these days. They want to help businesses curtail these events, so don’t feel silly bringing in the agents.
Concurrently, start technically remediating the breach. The exact steps you take will depend on the nature of the compromise, however these general rules of thumb almost always apply.
Remove customer data from the compromised area of the database and move it to a separate, secure location. Back up your site, database and all log files. If possible, backup your entire server including all operating system files. This help forensics determine the breach. Perform a complete reinstall of the OS and your Web applications, and make sure to use the most updated software versions available. Reintroduce your Web site files to the hosting environment using a clean backup, free of any hacked content. Keep in mind, the only way to be 100 percent sure all affected code, links, comments, etc have been removed is to rebuild the site from scratch. If speed is of the essence, restore from an encrypted site version saved prior to the breach. Change your password scheme. Believe it. Most hacks result from weak or conspicuous user logins and password credentials, so start fresh with a new scheme and separate logins for each service – FTP, control panel, software admin, email. Run third-party vulnerability scans on your site. WhiteHat Security offers a SaaS solution that will uncover vulnerabilities that need to be shored up before re-launching your site.
Step 4: Relaunch
When you’re confident the site is secure and all vulnerabilities have been patched, launch and resubmit your site to search engines in the appropriate way so it’s crawled again ASAP.
Step 5: Communicate
You’ve worked hard to get your site secure and back online. It’s now time to tell your customers the efforts taken to ensure the security of their information is your number one priority. Not only do you need to honestly and transparently communicate the breach but confidently affirm that their information is protected to the best of your abilities. This final communication is what determines if your customers are going to ever buy from you again.
Step 6: Prevention – and “the aftermath”
Even after your Web site is back online and business has returned to normal, your work is not done.
You’ll be facing fines, payment card industry probation, forensic audits and remediation. It’s not uncommon for even the smallest of businesses to rack up five or six digit expenses between penalties and legal fees. Forrester Research estimates that mitigation will cost an average of $200 for each person/credit card account that is compromised.
In reality, the unanticipated financial expense and “negative time” invested in remediating a security breach (especially during a peak selling period like the holidays) could be enough to squelch your start-ups chance of ever becoming a successful medium-size or large enterprise. That’s why it’s extremely important to focus your limited and precious resources wisely.
Protecting your Web site may seem like a hefty cost up front, but if it’s where you do business, it could be a life-saving investment. Get your site prepared for the worst-case scenario, so you have one less stress weighing on you this holiday season.
Virtual hosting?
Why do some organizations decide to host their own web site on their lonesome managed servers, while others contract with a Webhosting company or get their ecommerce hosting services thru an ISP ? While cost ( including risk ) and adaptability are commonly the 2 first points to consider when selecting the best way to host an internet site, understanding excellences among Webhosting options and the pros and cons of each will help you pare down the list to something significantly more controllable, making certain that you make the best call. Little to medium-sized companies generally select a virtual server plan where multiple ecommerce websites are hosted on space inside a single server. This service lets you share a server with others, but your internet site is further protected or isolated with its own server resources including processor, memory, and disk storage. This arrangement works really well for little sites that depend on dynamic generation of content from a backend database, tiny ecommerce sites, or for purchasers who would like to manage many separate internet sites. While more expensive, this kind of plan sometimes provides an increased level of security, support, and upkeep with a warranted level of availability. Offering this kind of guarantee sometimes reflects an amount of redundancy within the seller’s data-center operations that severely decreases the possibilities of down time or takes away the risk all together.
Depending on the vendor’s plan, adaptability means you can write and run your own custom scripts or applications and even use a content management system to control the internet site but not stress about handling the network, server hardware, or operating system.
The best call will probably be whether you mean to host the site yourself or contract with a webhosting seller. Scale is the first decision making factor. For setups that have already got a dedicated IT staff and information center, hosting might be a reasonable option.
The IT dept may, in turn, offer a shared server arrangement where organizational entities like the organization’s library are offered space on the server. But for people that are unable to tap into existing resources or who are working for firms without IT resources, contracting with an external webhosting supplier is the sole inexpensive option. Narrowing the decisions down can be tough as there are such a lot of sellers from which to select. For straightforward sites, the seller may provide tools for making and handling your internet site with available services to increase your website’s offerings, for example online form capacities. Or, you may use your own HTML writing tool and upload pages as required. Sellers attempt to make selecting plans as straightforward as practical by packaging most-requested services together into categorical webhosting plans.
Most plans need an upfront set-up fee together with an once per month fee covering the plan you select and any extra services ( additional email boxes, further storage, and so on. ) that you request. Ultimately, selecting a webhosting seller can be confusing because of the array of options. A winning approach includes developing your list of wants together with a plan for current and future expansion to permit you to significantly explain how your requirements map out against your domain hosting options.
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Internet Marketing Company: Avail the Latest Email Marketing Features to Reach ... Besides internet marketing services, the company is also well known for its SEO services, Web Hosting Solutions, Website Developing and Designing services. and more » |
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Web Hosting Year in Review: Hosting Software and Technology Open-Xchange has made incredible advances in web-based email and collaboration. R1Soft's CDP 3.0 represents the importance of data backup to enterprise |
Rackspace: 1.6M Paid Email Mailboxes
Web 2.0 JournalSan Antonio-based Rackspace Hosting, a provider of web hosting and related services, reports today that its Rackspace Email & Apps division, a provider of Rackspace Email & Apps Division Passes the 1.6 Million Paid Mailbox MarkBookkeeping: Beginning Positions in Sourcefire (FIRE) and Rackspace Hosting (RAx)all 34 news articles »
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7 Simple Ways to Save Money on Technology You Use Every Day
Green Web Hosting — Plant a Tree in Your Name The Internet is by far the largest community of the 21s century, with hundreds of thousands of new Websites
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Judge wants identities of H-1B posters
GoDaddy is complying with the order and has suspended the web hosting for ITgrunt.com, said Laurie Anderson. GoDaddy disputes manager, domain services. and more »
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