Word: trojan
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...thing to do. It makes our employees proud ... People always underestimate the amount of altruism among those who work for companies." Adds Hellman: "A lot of people in the private sector are genuinely concerned about issues like AIDS and TB. And our experience is that this is not a Trojan horse [for their corporate interests]. There's little money in it." In the end, says Sturchio, "Even if people disagree on the means, we can all agree on the end. And the world has no chance of solving these global health issues if we cannot get everybody working together...
...rankings can be frustrating for a campus that likes to be on top, but Harvard students lusting for signs of prowess can now look to a study that has placed Harvard atop the Ivies for its “sexual health.” Commissioned by the makers of Trojan condoms and compiled by an independent research firm, the second annual Sexual Health Report Card recorded a 3.55 GPA for Harvard—10th overall of the 139 schools assessed, and up from the 43rd spot last year. Among the 11 criteria in the study were availability of condoms...
...plus books on film. But on this five-foot shelf there are also an Ebert novel, Behind the Phantom's Mask (begun as a weekly newspaper serial); a travel book, Perfect London Walk, written with Daniel Curley; The Computer Insectiary: A Field Guide to Viruses, Bugs, Worms, Trojan Horses, and Other Stuff That Will Eat Your Programs and Rot Your Brain, co-authored with John Kratz; and at least five other books to which Roger has penned introductions. There's no writer's block for this perpetual scribe; he's never missed a deadline. I'll bet that if Roger...
...immigration certainly bode ill for accessibility to education, equally dangerous to the university’s charge are threats to academic and journalistic freedom. In November, the administration at the University of Southern California blocked the re-election of Zach Fox as editor in chief of the Daily Trojan, objecting to his call for greater financial transparency and a reorganization of the paper’s senior positions. The administration’s willingness to actively intervene in the student publication’s elections raised serious concerns about the independence of the collegiate press. Universities, like society at large...
...make matters worse, there are plenty of other weapons in the cybercriminal's arsenal. It's also possible, for example, to pilfer confidential data from secure networks by mounting Trojan e-mail attacks. These infect a PC by e-mail, using a program that runs undetected in the background. Free to perform tasks usually reserved for the system's owner, the invader can remotely swipe passwords, upload documents and transmit new attacks. In a report published in 2005, Britain's government-backed National Infrastructure Security Co-ordination Centre released details of a series of Trojan e-mail attacks...