Thứ Ba, 20 tháng 10, 2015

Five Strategies for Email Insider Threat Prevention

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Five Strategies for Email Insider Threat Prevention

Best practices to help prevent sensitive information leakage, while keeping up with the rapidly evolving regulatory environment. Click here to download
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Latest News Oct 20, 2015

Google Makes Full-Disk Encryption Mandatory for New Android 6.0 Devices Yes, Google wants you to keep your bits and bytes as safe as possible through encryption. With the launch of Android 5.0 Lollipop last year, Google wanted to make full disk Encryption mandatory, but unfortunately, the idea did not go too well. However, Google thinks the idea will go right this time, and it will try again to require full-disk encryption by default for devices that ...

More than 250 iOS Apps Caught Using Private APIs to Collect Users' Private Data Apple is cleaning up its iTunes App Store again – for the third time in two months – following another flood of iOS apps that secretly collect users' personal information. Researchers discovered more than 250 iOS apps that were violating Apple's App Store privacy policy, gathering personal identifiable data from almost one Million users estimated to have downloaded those offending apps. The ...

This Malware Can Delete and Replace Your Entire Chrome Browser with a lookalike Security researchers have uncovered a new piece of Adware that replaces your entire browser with a dangerous copy of Google Chrome, in a way that you will not notice any difference while browsing. The new adware software, dubbed "eFast Browser," works by installing and running itself in place of Google Chrome The adware does all kinds of malicious activities that we have seen quite ...

High school Student Hacked Into CIA Director's Personal Email Account A self-described teenage hacker has claimed to have hacked into personal AOL email account of Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Director John Brennan and swiped sensitive top-secret data. It's Really a major embarrassment for Brennan as well as the CIA. The hacker, who describes himself as an American high school student, called the New York Post to describe his exploits.

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