Are you making your way to Olympia, London for Infosec Europe this week? Stop by the stand, say the Phrase That Pays and we’ll give you a free T-shirt.
from Naked Security http://bit.ly/2KojQDZ
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Are you making your way to Olympia, London for Infosec Europe this week? Stop by the stand, say the Phrase That Pays and we’ll give you a free T-shirt.
from Naked Security http://bit.ly/2KojQDZ
via IFTTT
…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.
from Naked Security http://bit.ly/2XtcXVO
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From tackling anti-robocalling in the Senate to a data breach at a license plate reader company, here are last week’s top infosec stories.
from Naked Security http://bit.ly/2EPWcg9
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Google announced that on 25 June 2019, Gmail’s confidential mode will be switched on by default as the feature becomes generally available.
from Naked Security http://bit.ly/2XmXvdF
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Suse developer Aleksa Sarai has uncovered a bug in the way that the container framework handles path names.
from Naked Security http://bit.ly/2wt2HRd
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Hugely 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.
from Naked Security http://bit.ly/2XfxGMl
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“…nation-state actors have demonstrated intent and capability to leverage VPN services and vulnerable users for malicious purposes.”
from Naked Security http://bit.ly/2MlgyUI
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A name-and-shame database is supposed to “save” husbands from wives who have appeared on porn sites.
from Naked Security http://bit.ly/2Kh2fxC
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A Monero cryptominer made a home on an Apache Tomcat server and just wouldn’t stay away.
from Naked Security http://bit.ly/2wtLTKc
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Police close their investigation, concluding that New Zealand’s “wellbeing” budget wasn’t hacked.
from Naked Security http://bit.ly/2I5iZoW
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