--------------------------------------------------------------------- This page was printed from the Secure Computing Corporation web site,
located at ---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
Editorial Contact: David Burt, Secure Computing Corporation 206 892-1130, David_Burt@securecomputing.com
-Germany, UK Domains lead the pack, tiny Sao Tome leads all of Africa SAN JOSE, CA, Jun 24, 2004 – Secure Computing Corporation (NASDAQ: SCUR), the experts in securing connections between people, applications, and networks™, today announced the release of the first study of the global distribution of pornographic web pages by the top 100 individual country domains. The study examined pornographic web pages in the Secure Computing SmartFilter® v4 Control List by non-U.S. country suffixes, such as .DE for Germany and .JP for Japan, and found over 46 million pages of pornography in the top 100 individual country suffixes. The study found that the 46,000,000 pages of pornography contained in the SmartFilter database were overwhelmingly concentrated in two regions, Europe and the Pacific. There were 28 million pages in European domains, and Australia and islands in the Pacific accounted for 12 million pages. Internet pornography was scant in African domains and almost non-existent in Middle Eastern domains. The study was limited to specific country suffixes, and did not include non-country specific domains such as .com and .net. While it was expected that most overseas pornography would be in European domains, the study revealed some surprising findings:
"Pages of commercial pornography, like spam, continue to not only grow at an alarming rate, but spread to new countries as they join the Internet. These millions of pages of pornography may create serious liability and productivity problems for employers around the world," said Mike Gallagher, senior vice president of product development at Secure Computing. "Given the international nature of the Internet, filtering at the gateway level for networks in businesses, schools and homes will remain for the foreseeable future the only effective way to control Internet pornography."
About Secure Computing
This press release contains forward-looking statements relating to Secure Computing’s ability to accurately categorize and restrict customer access to Internet pornography through the company’s SmartFilter, N2H2, Bess, and Sentian product lines, and the expected benefits of such categorization, and such statements involve a number of risks and uncertainties. Among the important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated by such forward-looking statements are delays in product development, undetected software errors or bugs, competitive pressures, technical difficulties, changes in customer requirements, general economic conditions and the risk factors detailed from time to time in Secure Computing’s periodic reports and registration statements filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. |
--------------------------------------------------------------------- This page was printed from the Secure Computing Corporation web site,
located at ---------------------------------------------------------------------