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+4 +2The Dark Web Has Nothing on Data Brokers
To regular folks with some basic computer skills the Dark Web seems to be Enemy #1. People talk about it like it’s the Internet Demogorgon. And the media doesn’t help either, not to mention InfoSec marketing departments. As far as they’re concerned, if you don’t say the name of your password manager 7 times before bed the Dark Web will haunt your closet.
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How-to+1 +1
How Routers Can Invite Nasty Malwares - Wireless Router Printer
As usage of internet service is increasing day by day,Similarly Viruses, Malwares and many other attacks are also increasing. Lets know How to avoid them.
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+26 +3Over 36,000 Flash Games Have Been Saved And Are Now Playable Offline
For a long time, the internet was filled with games and animation all built-in Flash. But when this year ends, Flash will die as nearly all major web browsers will remove Flash support on Dec. 31, 2020. Luckily, all that content won’t be lost thanks to Flashpoint, a project which has saved over 36,000 Flash games from disappearing forever.
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+20 +2Bernie Sanders Thinks Companies That Sell Your Browser History Are ‘Trampling Over the Rights of Consumers’
"No reasonable person would expect antivirus software to be selling off their private browsing data to the highest bidder."
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+22 +4Europe has a plan to break Google and Amazon's cloud dominance
By now, you’ve likely come to terms with the fact that escape from Jeff Bezos is impossible. You may have weaned yourself off that sweet sweet next day delivery, procuring all your worldly needs from a boutique array of small local shops, but if you venture online, Bezos still wins – cutting out Amazon’s cloud computing services renders the internet literally unusable.
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+18 +5Jeff Bezos’s Phone Hack Should Terrify Everyone
Those with the most to lose don’t always safeguard their privacy very well. You can do better.
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+25 +5Stop accidentally handing over your personal information with these online privacy tips
2020 is off to a chaotic start, but locking down your online privacy is still vital. Give yourself an online privacy check-up and start 2020 securely
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+18 +6Election Security At The Chip Level
Why your electronic voting options might not get better any time soon: RISC-V-based solution under development, but the very nature of a voting system raises issues.
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+4 +1Unpatched VPN makes Travelex latest victim of “REvil” ransomware
In April of 2019, Pulse Secure issued an urgent patch to a vulnerability in its popular corporate VPN software—a vulnerability that not only allowed remote attackers to gain access without a username or password but also to turn off multi-factor authentication and view logs, usernames, and passwords cached by the VPN server in plain text. Now, a cybercriminal group is using that vulnerability to target and infiltrate victims, steal data, and plant ransomware.
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+13 +1Alienated, Alone And Angry: What the Digital Revolution Really Did To Us
In April 1997, Wired magazine published a feature with the grand and regrettable title “Birth of a Digital Nation.” It was a good time to make sweeping, sunny pronouncements about the future of the United States and technology. The US stood alone astride the globe. Its stock market was booming. Microsoft was about to become the world’s most valuable company, a first for a tech firm. A computer built by IBM was about to beat the world chess champion at his own game.
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+18 +2Why the quantum internet should be built in space
The best way to distribute quantum entanglement around the globe is via a massive constellation of orbiting satellites, physicists say. The quantum internet is a dream that many technologists have expounded in recent years. The idea is to exploit the strange quantum properties of photons and electrons to send messages with perfect secrecy.
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+17 +5Be careful you are not giving away your privacy with Christmas gifts this year
This Christmas, you may be considering just how much your family would appreciate a cool new gadget – that latest internet-enabled watch for dad, a smart speaker for your grandmother’s kitchen, or an amazingly interactive talking doll for your niece.
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+14 +1The Machines Are Learning, and So Are the Students
Artificial intelligence is starting to take over repetitive tasks in classrooms, like grading, and is optimizing coursework and revolutionizing the preparation for college entrance exams.
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+14 +1Why cryptocurrency will change the world?
The development of the global financial system largely determines where the whole world goes. It’s hard to assume what will influence our life more than the growing market of cryptocurrencies. Question: What will make the cryptocurrency the major driving force of the world financial system in the near future?
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+33 +2Russia successfully disconnected from the internet
RuNet disconnection tests were successful, according to the Russian government.
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+23 +3The law that helped the internet flourish now undermines democracy
Section 230 of the 1996 US Telecoms Act is just 26 words long – but its impact has been incalculable
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+24 +4Twelve Million Phones, One Dataset, Zero Privacy
EVERY MINUTE OF EVERY DAY, everywhere on the planet, dozens of companies — largely unregulated, little scrutinized — are logging the movements of tens of millions of people with mobile phones and storing the information in gigantic data files. The Times Privacy Project obtained one such file, by far the largest and most sensitive ever to be reviewed by journalists. It holds more than 50 billion location pings from the phones of more than 12 million Americans as they moved through several major cities, including Washington, New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles.
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+14 +2For a greener future, we must accept there's nothing inherently sustainable about going digital
Last year, it was estimated data centres around the world generated the same amount of carbon emissions as created by the global airline industry's fuel usage.
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+32 +14AIM was the killer app of 1997. It’s still shaping the internet today
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, AOL’s Instant Messenger introduced millions of people to the internet—and the idea that you were always online, even when you were “away.”
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+9 +3CIRA brands people without ‘.ca’ websites as traitors
The Canadian Internet Registration Authority (CIRA) has debuted its first-ever broadcast campaign, aimed at making the ownership of a “.ca” website a point of national pride for business owners. The CIRA is the organization responsible for policies related to the internet in Canada, as well as the country’s involvement in international internet governance, but its primary task is managing Canada’s “.ca” top-level web domain.
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