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...then maybe they deserve this drivel, says a Macedonian copy-paste/turn-it-into-clickbait-bile writer who says it's all about the money.
Lees meerFrom tackling anti-robocalling in the Senate to a data breach at a license plate reader company, here are last week's top infosec stories.
Lees meerGoogle announced that on 25 June 2019, Gmail's confidential mode will be switched on by default as the feature becomes generally available.
Lees meerSuse developer Aleksa Sarai has uncovered a bug in the way that the container framework handles path names.
Lees meerHugely popular news aggregation site Flipboard - one billion app downloads from Google Play and counting - has become the latest internet company to admit it has suffered a breach.
Lees meer"...nation-state actors have demonstrated intent and capability to leverage VPN services and vulnerable users for malicious purposes."
Lees meerA name-and-shame database is supposed to "save" husbands from wives who have appeared on porn sites.
Lees meerA Monero cryptominer made a home on an Apache Tomcat server and just wouldn't stay away.
Lees meerPolice close their investigation, concluding that New Zealand's "wellbeing" budget wasn't hacked.
Lees meerAn internet-wide scan has revealed almost one million devices vulnerable to CVE-2019-0708.
Lees meer"We had access to the grade book. Now we could change the grades."
Lees meerNow it's easier for attackers to produce deepfakes, even if the target doesn't have much existing footage. Like the Mona Lisa.
Lees meerThe defendants allegedly pulled in over $1.3 million over the course of about six years for unnecessary and undelivered tech support.
Lees meerPen Test Partners has found some major security flaws in the Bluetooth Nokelock that consumers might like to know about.
Lees meerThe initial breach notification was topped with marketing fluff: an unfortunate choice, given what could be the resulting glazed eyeballs.
Lees meerResearchers revealed a massive hole in Google Safe Browsing's mobile browser protection that existed for over a year.
Lees meerThe Watch Tower sought to unmask a Jehovah's Witness who posted its content to show what data the organization collects and processes.
Lees meerOne of the US’s most widely used vehicle license plate reader (LPR) companies, Perceptics, is reportedly investigating a data breach.
Lees meerThe TRACED Act was a slam dunk in the Senate, where it passed with an overwhelming 97-1 vote.
Lees meerA day late! From potential Windows 10 borkings to hackers hacking hackers - catch up on everything we wrote last week.
Lees meerTales from the honeypot: this time a MySQL-based attack. Old tricks still work, because we're still making old mistakes - here's what to do.
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