Sunbelt Partners With Cloudmark For Anti-Spam Solution
The News Review:
- Sunbelt Partners With Cloudmark For Anti-Spam Solution
- LiveArts recalls bay’s early days
- Canada Finds New Mad Cow Case, Second in 10 Days
- ‘Europe’s last dictator’ rations foreign music.
Sunbelt Partners With Cloudmark For Anti-Spam Solution
InformationWeek – Jan 12, 2005
The new anti-spam functionality will be implemented in an upcoming version of Sunbelt’s product line which is expected to be available later this month. “Cloudmark was chosen due to its industry reputation and exceptional results from our performance tests,” said Sunbelt president Alex Eckelberry. He also said that his company had been looking for a partner that had the sort of spam expertise that would make iHateSpam for Exchange more powerful and be able to do so quickly. Cloudmark CEO Karl Jacob said that Sunbelt’s award-winning solutions and durability in the security business are clear evidence that it puts the best possible technology on the market.
LiveArts recalls bay’s early days
St. Petersburg Times – Jan 12, 2005
23 in the Janet Root Theatre at Shorecrest Preparatory School in St. The LiveArts Peninsula Foundation is home-grown, after all, a nonprofit group devoted to producing original plays about Florida history. Harry Chittenden is its executive director. Crossing the Bay puts fictional characters into real-life events in the 1880s, formative years for St. Petersburg and Tampa. The script borrows from Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.
Canada Finds New Mad Cow Case, Second in 10 Days
planetark.com – Jan 12, 2005
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency said the diseased beef cow, born just after Canada tightened feed restrictions in 1997, was not linked to another instance of mad cow disease announced on Jan. The new case is Canada’s third home-grown instance of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE). “Based on preliminary information, feed produced prior to the introduction of the 1997 feed ban in Canada remains the most likely source of infection in this animal,” the CFIA said in a statement. Washington imposed a total ban on cattle imports in May 2003 after Canada revealed its first case of mad cow disease. A ban on many beef products has since been lifted but young live cattle are still barred. Canadian farmers estimate sanctions by the United States and other export markets may have cost them up to C$5 billion ($4 billion).
‘Europe’s last dictator’ rations foreign music.
Free with registration – Europe Intelligence Wire – AccessMyLibrary.com – Jan 12, 2005
–> COPYRIGHT 2005 Financial Times Ltd. (From Belfast Telegraph) Byline: Andrew Osborn in Moscow Radio stations in Belarus, Europe’s most repressive state, have been ordered to cut back drastically on the amount of foreign music they play. Under a draconian new decree, only two of every 10 tracks played on FM radio can be foreign.