The latest “let’s see how YOU like it” project aims to track what government employees are up to online.
US Internet Company Refused To Participate In NSA Surveillance, Documents Reveal
Zack Whittaker reports via ZDNet: A U.S. company refused to comply with a top-secret order that compelled it to facilitate government surveillance, according to newly declassified documents. According to the document, the unnamed company’s refusal to participate in the surveillance…
Post-WannaCry, 5.5 Million Devices Still Expose SMB Port
In its annual National Exposure Index report, Rapid7 found 160 million computers, IoT devices and servers with open ports that should not be exposed to the public network.
Microsoft Patches Two Critical Vulnerabilities Under Attack
Microsoft patched 95 vulnerabilities today, including two under attack.
Distributor caught selling Apple customers’ data
Police have uncovered a large network of Apple distributor employees selling iPhone users’ data on the cyberunderground.
Facebook wants to feel your pain (and your joy)
Feeling happy? Feeling sad? Facebook plans to harness your phone’s keyboard and camera to find out.
Apple to auto-update devices to two-factor authentication
iOS 11 and macOS High Sierra public beta testers will be automatically upgraded from 2SV. But, most users are unclear about the benefits of using 2FA.
Threatpost News Wrap, June 9, 2017
How EternalBlue was ported to Windows 10, a Facebook phishing study, QakBot, and this week’s Apple security announcements are all discussed.
GameStop Online Shoppers Officially Warned of Breach
Some customers are irked it took GameStop months to inform them that their personal and financial information could have been compromised in a breach of GameStop.com that began in August 2016.
Apple’s Safari is going to use AI to track who’s tracking you
Safari will use machine learning to decide which third-party cookies to block, with the aim of reducing how much your footsteps around the web are followed by advertisers