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As each generation of portable electronic devices and storage
media becomes smaller, higher in capacity, and easier to transport,
it's becoming increasingly difficult to protect the data on these
devices while still enabling their productive use in the workplace.
Explaining how mobile devices can create backdoor security threats,
Mobile Device Security: A Comprehensive Guide to Securing Your
Information in a Moving World specifies immediate actions you can
take to defend against these threats. It begins by introducing and
defining the concepts essential to understanding the security
threats to contemporary mobile devices, and then takes readers
through all the policy, process, and technology decisions that must
be made to create an effective security strategy.
Highlighting the risks inherent when mobilizing data, the text
supplies a proven methodology for identifying, analyzing, and
evaluating these risks. It examines the various methods used to
store and transport mobile data and illustrates how the security of
that data changes as it moves from place to place. Addressing the
technical, operational, and compliance issues relevant to a
comprehensive mobile security policy, the text:
- Provides methods for modeling the interaction between mobile
data and mobile devices-detailing the advantages and disadvantages
of each
- Explains how to use encryption and access controls to protect
your data
- Describes how to layer different technologies to create a
resilient mobile data protection program
- Provides examples of effective mobile security policies and
discusses the implications of different policy approaches
- Highlights the essential elements of a mobile security business
case and provides examples of the information such proposals should
contain
- Reviews the most common mobile device controls and discusses
the options for implementing them in your mobile environment
Securing your mobile data requires the proper balance between
security, user acceptance, technology capabilities, and resource
commitment. Supplying real-life examples and authoritative
guidance, this complete resource walks you through the process of
creating an effective mobile security program and provides the
understanding required to develop a customized approach to securing
your information.
We take our medicines on faith. We assume our doctors are well-informed, our drug companies scrupulous, our FDA diligent--and our medications safe. All too often we're wrong. Just how wrong is documented in this critically acclaimed portrait of the international pharmaceutical industry by one of our most highly respected investigative journalists.
According to the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), adverse drug reactions are the fourth leading cause of death in America. Reactions to prescription and over-the-counter medications kill far more people annually than all illegal drug use combined.
Stephen Fried's wife took a pill for a minor infection--and ended up in the emergency room. Some drug reactions go away in a few hours or days. Diane's did not. This emotionally wrenching experience launched Fried into a five-year examination of the entire pharmaceutical industry, the most profitable legal business in the world. Rigorously documented, Bitter Pills is a full-scale portrait of pill making and pill taking in America today, presented through the powerful human drama of doctors, patients, drug companies, the FDA, and government regulators as they war for control of our medicine cabinets.
From award-winning journalist Stephen Fried comes a vividly intimate portrait of American Judaism today in which faith, family, and community are explored through the dramatic life of a landmark congregation as it seeks to replace its legendary retiring rabbi--and reinvent itself for the next generation.
The New Rabbi
The center of this compelling chronicle is Har Zion Temple on Philadelphia’s Main Line, which for the last seventy-five years has been one of the largest and most influential congregations in America. For thirty years Rabbi Gerald Wolpe has been its spiritual leader, a brilliant sermonizer of wide renown--but now he has announced his retirement. It is the start of a remarkable nationwide search process largely unknown to the lay world--and of much more. For at this dramatic moment Wolpe agrees to give extraordinary access to Fried, inviting him--and the reader--into the intense personal and professional life of the clergy and the complex behind-the-scenes life of a major Conservative congregation.
These riveting pages bring us a unique view of Judaism in practice: from Har Zion’s strong-willed leaders and influential families to the young bar and bat mitzvahs just beginning their Jewish lives; from the three-days-a-year synagogue goers to the hard core of devout attendees. We are touched by their times of joy and times of grief, intrigued by congregational politics, moved by the search for faith. We witness the conflicts between generations about issues of belief, observance, and the pressures of secular life. We meet Wolpe’s vigorous-minded ailing wife and his sons, one of whom has become a celebrity rabbi in Los Angeles. And we follow the author’s own moving search for meaning as he reconnects with the religion of his youth.
We also have a front-row seat at the usually clandestine process of choosing a new rabbi, as what was expected to be a simple one-year search for Rabbi Wolpe’s successor extends to two years and then three. Dozens of résumés are rejected, a parade of prospects come to interview, the chosen successor changes his mind at the last minute, and a confrontation erupts between the synagogue and the New York–based Conservative rabbis’ “union” that governs the process. As the time comes for Wolpe to depart, a venerated house of worship is being torn apart. And thrust onto the pulpit is Wolpe’s young assistant, Rabbi Jacob Herber, in his first job out of rabbinical school, facing the nearly impossible situation of taking over despite being technically ineligible for the position--and finding himself on trial with the congregation and at odds with his mentor.
Rich in anecdote and scenes of wonderful immediacy, this is a riveting book about the search for personal faith, about the tension between secular concerns and ancient tradition in affluent America, and about what Wolpe himself has called “the retail business of religion.” Stephen Fried brings all these elements to vivid life with the passion and energy of a superbly gifted storyteller.
From the Hardcover edition.
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