Virus writer donates money to Chinese pandas
The Chinese man jailed for writing the ‘Fujacks’ worm in 2006 appears to be trying to rehabilitate his public image, reportedly making made a donation to a panda research centre in the country.
Read more on Network World
Google, Microsoft ad networks hit by with malware
Doubleclick and Hotmail sites caught serving malicious ads For a brief period this week, cybercriminals managed to infect Google’s and Microsoft’s online ad networks with malicious advertisements that attacked users’ PCs, according to security consultancy Armorize.
Read more on PC Advisor
Watch your back from hack attacks
Follow these tips to avoid having your personal and financial details stolen over the internet.
Read more on Sydney Morning Herald
Research. Love it or despise it, few deny that without it, risk goes up. Risk that your assumptions are off-base, causing targets to be missed by a mile. Risk that foregoing it will end up costing more time and money, through failed initiatives, costly redesigns, etc.
In this issue, we hope to get you excited about an important part of the work that you may have mixed feelings about. We begin by providing an overview of the current market research landscape, and give attention to some new research methods that can expose different or deeper insights than traditional methods. Then, we examine new uses for an old research method that many marketers now consider indispensable. Next, we offer actionable advice on how to create a sensible research plan to help you meet your objectives. Finally, we take a close look at social media analysis as a growing research trend.
We hope you find this issue of The Source informative and, as always, we welcome your feedback.
Tony Brinton Creative Director & Editor in Chief
Reference research: finance research and health research and travel research and recent update
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