Tag Archive for: Changed

1 Year After Equifax Data Breach, Not Enough Has Changed

  1. 1 Year After Equifax Data Breach, Not Enough Has Changed  WABE 90.1 FM
  2. A year after the Equifax breach, there are consequences—for consumers  Quartz
  3. A year after Equifax, be prepared for the next data breach  The Hill
  4. A year later, Equifax lost your data but faced little fallout  TechCrunch
  5. Full coverage

data breach – read more

Equifax data breach: What’s changed since last year’s huge hack of personal information?

  1. Equifax data breach: What’s changed since last year’s huge hack of personal information?  USA TODAY
  2. Full coverage

data breach – read more

How Hotmail changed Microsoft (and email) forever

Enlarge / The many lives of Hotmail. (credit: Sean Gallagher)

Twenty years ago this week, on December 29, 1997, Bill Gates bought Microsoft a $ 450 million late Christmas present: a Sunnyvale-based outfit called Hotmail. With the buy—the largest all-cash Internet startup purchase of its day—Microsoft plunged into the nascent world of Web-based email.

Originally launched in 1996 by Jack Smith and Sabeer Bhatia as “HoTMaiL” (referencing HTML, the language of the World Wide Web), Hotmail was initially folded into Microsoft’s MSN online service. Mistakes were made. Many dollars were spent. Branding was changed. Spam became legion. Many, many horrendous email signatures were spawned.

But over the years that followed, Hotmail would set the course for all the Web-based email offerings that followed, launching the era of mass-consumer free email services. Along the way, Hotmail drove changes in Windows itself (particularly in what would become Windows Server) that would lay the groundwork for the operating system to make its push into the data center. And the email service would be Microsoft’s first step toward what is now the Azure cloud.

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Biz & IT – Ars Technica

KRACK Wi-Fi attack – the rules haven’t changed

Krack - the rules haven't changed

KRACK may be the biggest vulnerability of the year – a flaw in the WPA2 protocol used to encrypt Wi-Fi communications.

Graham Cluley