Thứ Năm, 25 tháng 6, 2015

The Risks of One-Size-Fits-All Security

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The Risks of One-Size-Fits-All Security

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Latest News Jun 25, 2015

Google Chrome Silently Listening to Your Private Conversations Google was under fire of downloading and installing a Chrome extension surreptitiously and subsequently listened to the conversations of Chromium users without consent. After these accusations, a wave of criticism by privacy campaigners and open source developers has led Google to remove the extension from Chromium, the open-source version of the Chrome browser. The extension in ...

Mind Blowing Radar-based Gesture Recognition Technology for Everything Since it introduced at the annual Google I/O conference, Project Soli has been trending on the Internet. Project Soli is one of Google's latest cutting-edge experiments that could actually transform the way humans interact with technology. Project Soli is not a wearable watch you might think it is. So what is Project Soli? It's you. Yes, you heard it right. Google's secretive ...

'Undo Send' — How to Unsend Emails in Gmail Sending an important and confidential email to one of my friends and mistakenly clicked send to someone else. Holy crap! This is something experienced by everyone of us at some point. When we accidentally hit the reply-all button, send an email to the wrong person, or sometimes forget to attach a file, and then left only with an instant pain of regret. It feels like there is no going back. ...

Creator of Blackshades Malware Jailed 4 Years in New York A Swedish man who was the mastermind behind the $40 BlackShades Remote Access Tool (RAT) that infected over half a million systems around the world was sentenced to almost five years in a U.S. prison on Tuesday. Alex Yücel, 25, owned and operated an organization called "BlackShades" that sold a sophisticated and notorious form of software, called RAT, to several thousands of hackers and ...

How to Hack into Computers using Pita Bread and A Radio There's a new and clever way of hacking into computers, and it can be done cheaply – Using just a radio receiver and a piece of pita bread. Yeah, you heard it right. Security researchers at Tel Aviv University have demonstrated how to extract secret decryption keys from computers by capturing radio emissions of laptop computers. Capturing the radio signals to steal data from a computer ...

The Risks of One-Size-Fits-All Security

Individualized security measures can help owners rest easy. Click here to download
[Sponsored]

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