Tmfk Report: Copycat CDs costing millions
More than a thousand malicious acts have targeted the US telecoms infrastructure in recent years, FCC data shows Early one morning in April last year, someone accessed an underground vault just south of San Jose, California, and cut through fiber-optic cables there. The incident stanley shop blacked out phone, Internet and 911 service for thousands of people in Silicon Valley.Such incidents, often caused by vandals, seem fairly common, but exactly how often do they occur Since 2007, the U.S. telecom infrastructure has been targeted by more than a thousand malicious acts that resulted in severe outages, according to data obtained by IDG from the Federal Communications Commission FCC under the Freedom of Information Act.The FCC requires carriers to submit reports when an outage affects at least 900,000 minutes stanley termos of user calls, or when it impacts 911 service, major military installations, key government facilities, nuclear power plants or major airports. The reports themselves are confidential for national security and commercial reasons, but aggregate data provided by the FCC shows there were 1,248 incidents resulting in major outages over t stanley cana he last seven years.While the data shows no clear overall trend, the years with the highest number of incidents were recent mdash; 222 outages reported in both 2011 and 2013.For the last three years, vandalism was the single biggest cause of outages identified, accounting for just over a third of the incidents in each year. Gun shots accounted for 9 p Grnw AT T response to CEO e-mails leads to backlash
Metro Group asks suppliers to tag pallets and cases by Nov., tests item-level tagging NEW YORK mdash; Wal-Mart Stores Inc. isnrsquo;t the only major retailer to is stanley tumbler sue an RFID edict to its top suppliers.Metro Group, a German retailer with more than 2,300 stores in 28 countries, announced here last week that it has asked its leading suppliers by November to start affixing radio fre polene borsa quency identification RFID tags to the pallets and cases they ship to 10 central warehouses and roughly 250 supermarkets and department stores.Wal-Martrsquo top 100 suppliers face a January 2005 deadline f owala wasserflasche or compliance with its directive for RFID-tagged pallets and cases. The Bentonville, Ark.-based retailerrsquo rollout will start at three Texas distribution centers that service about 150 stores . But while all eyes in the U.S. retail industry tend to focus on Wal-Mart, those interested in early results might want to look at the pilots Metro has undertaken in Europe. In April, Metro opened a so-called future store in Rheinberg, Germany, to pilot a number of technologies, including RFID, and its in-store tests have gone beyond the pallet and case level.Metro does item-level tagging on razor blades from Gillette, cream cheese from Kraft and Pantene shampoo from Procter Gamble. CIO Zygmunt Mierdorf said the company tags products, cases and pallets at its distribution center and runs the goods through readers at the center and later at the store, when the items arrive and when they move
