Top Product Ratings:  TVs  |  Digital Cameras  |  Computers  |  Cell Phones  |  Printers  |  Camcorders  |  Blu-ray & DVD Players  |  MP3 Players
| More
Announcing a new feature for the Electronics Blog
Mar 12, 2008 7:00 PM

As our annual State of the Net survey has shown for the past several years, the insecurity of online consumers is a severe national problem that affects nearly everyone and costs American consumers billions of dollars annually.

Coverage of this important subject has become an integral part of our electronics content, both in print and online. While we will continue reporting on Internet threats of all types, and testing the key products and services that help you protect yourself online, this year we will begin to do even more.

Specifically, we will increase our online efforts to inform consumers and policymakers about Internet threats and how to fight them. As part of this effort, we're today launching Online Security, a category within the Electronics Blog, devoted specifically to consumers' online security.

Subject areas we'll be covering in blog entries to the category include:

We'll be reporting news of importance to the security of online consumers, plus news from related conferences and events we attend, such as RSA, CFP 2008, consumer-protection events organized by the Federal Trade Commission, and others.

To provide this breadth of coverage, we'll be reaching beyond the editors whose primary work focuses on computers and Internet security, computer writer Donna Tapellini and myself, to include postings by an all-star team of staffers from other areas of Consumer Reports and Consumers Union (our parent organization), including:

There are two ways you can access this important content:

From ConsumerReports.org, go to our free Cyber-security section and you'll find a link to the "Online Security Blog." Or, search the Electronics Blog itself for postings in the category, "Online Security." To discuss online security with other consumers, visit our online security forum. (Free registration is required to post messages.)

—€”Jeff Fox, Technology Editor

Post a comment

Comments:

1
Expand All
Collapse All