- Wed Apr 14 2004 Study: Financial services giants to outsource more
Research analysts with TowerGroup say the top 15 financial services firms will escalate outsourcing from $1.6 billion in spending this year to nearly $4 billion by 2008.
Posted by CNET News.com Staff
- Wed Mar 12 2003 Offshore Street contracts on the rise
Posted by Ed Frauenheim
- Wed Dec 1 2004 Report: Cost of phishing not so high
Online scams will snatch less money from consumers' pockets than analysts have estimated, a financial firm contends.
Posted by Robert Lemos
- Fri Dec 3 2004 This week in phishing
Phishers are setting up fraudulent e-commerce Web sites and waiting for victims using Google and other search engines to find them.
Posted by Steven Musil
- Mon Sep 8 2003 IBM sees a mint in bank branch tech
The technology giant is leading a team of industry players that are looking to cash in on the banking industry's move to spend billions of dollars on revamping branch location technology.
Posted by Matt Hines
- Tue Feb 3 2004 Microsoft, Volante ally for e-processing
The companies plan to build STP, or straight-through processing, capabilities for the financial services market, according to Microsoft.
Posted by Matt Hines
- Fri Dec 3 2004 Week in review: Deck the malls
It may be the happiest time of the year for merchants, but gamers and home entertainment enthusiasts may be disappointed.
Posted by Steven Musil
- Wed May 3 2000 IBM to announce $1 billion deals in financial services industry
In a push for new revenues, Big Blue is recruiting partners to help it stave off competition in the lucrative financial services industry.
Posted by Melanie Austria Farmer
- Mon Feb 5 2007 Security gets mainstream attention at RSA
Security is becoming standard and there's the smell of blood in the air as the industry is increasingly dominated by big-name companies.
Posted by Joris Evers
- Tue Sep 7 2004 Digital content spurs micropayments resurgence
A growing appetite for digital content helps companies that enable small-ticket online transactions.
Posted by Matt Hines