Sony has made good on its promise to offer free identity theft protection, including a $1 million insurance policy, to PlayStation Network and Qriocity users, the company announced on the PlayStation blog today.
The offer is a good gesture from Sony, following the April PlayStation Network attack that lasted nearly a month, wherein private user data (including credit card numbers and account passwords) was stolen from its systems. But it remains to be seen if this will be enough to repair Sony’s reputation with gamers.
According to the PlayStation blog: “AllClear ID PLUS is a premium identity protection service that uses advanced technology to deliver alerts to help keep you safe. Full story...
Facebook’s first five days as a public company saw its value drop 13.1 percent, the worst first-week performance of any initial public offering in a decade.
Similar to the way that hardcore PC enthusiasts overclock their CPUs to squeeze out extra performance, Ford is preparing a car with an “overclocked” turbocharger.
Guest Post
“Startups are the sum of the decisions made by the people who run them,” Future Simple founder Uzi Shmilovici wrote in a recent post.
Guest Post
Many entrepreneurs dream of starting their own company so they can be their own boss, call the shots, get the corner office nicest table in the co-working space.
Sponsored Post You're building a tablet app, and you need to make decisions on what platforms to support.
Hawken is one of the highly anticipated free-to-play downloadable games coming this fall. Graphics chip maker Nvidia showed a demo of the online mech-combat title today in order to demonstrate its cloud graphics technology.
Sponsored Post Startup investing used to be only for the rich, only if you knew the right people, and only in deals in your city.
This week’s VBWeekly got a little goofy, while our anchor Jolie O’Dell was traveling to the East Coast.
Over in the land of slightly crazy lawsuits, a man from Arizona filed a lawsuit Friday to make “Google” a generic word, Paid Content reports.
A billion dollars will buy you a lot of things, and, in the case of Instagram, one of those things happens to be exposure to millions.