Tag Archive for: finding

Robert Francis: Finding common ground in memories of 9/11


We weren’t three strangers, but it was the first time we had met in person. What we had in common is that we were about to take the stage to talk about cybersecurity. We also found that we were not quite strangers in terms of the road we had traveled to get to the Hurst Conference Center on Sept. 9.

I was the moderator. Though I have written reams of copy about cybersecurity, my expertise is wafer thin. The other panelists had more hands-on experience in the cybersecurity field.

Those experts included Brett Leatherman, Supervisory Special Agent in the Dallas division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. He focuses on cybersecurity, and having worked with him on two panels on the subject I’ve seen firsthand that he knows his stuff.

Unlike many involved in government work, he is also an excellent communicator. That’s why he was on the panel.

The other expert was Michael Moore, founder and CEO of managed service provider M3 Networks in Southlake. He is passionate about cybersecurity.

We had all done a webinar on the same subject earlier this year, and Michael has written several columns for the Business Press raising awareness about computer security issues.

We knew each other, as I said, but this was in person, a chance to learn a bit about each other. The panel was part of a luncheon at the HEB Chamber of Commerce on Sept. 9.

As we waited for the program to begin, slides were informing members of various events planned in the future. There was also a slide commemorating the 20th anniversary of 9/11, a day that changed the way we live. It also changed many of our lives.

The slide prompted the FBI agent to talk about how the events of Sept. 11, 2001, were a motivation in leading him to his current career. Michael and I told somewhat similar stories. Even though we were not directly involved, 9/11 did change us and the trajectory of our lives, whether we realized it at the time or not. A ripple effect with the center being the haunting image of those two burning World Trade Center towers on a bright, sun-drenched New York morning that – prior to 8:46 a.m. – had been full of promise.

I found their stories intriguing, so I asked the two…

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Apple AirTags vs. Tile: The Best Tool for Finding Your Lost Stuff


“Come on. I’m right here, inside your unnecessarily puffy coat. No, not that pocket—the one with the stale muffin crumbs and crumpled CVS receipt.”

My often-misplaced work ID card can’t tell me how it really feels, thankfully, but it does now communicate with me via the $29 Apple AirTag tracker I’ve attached to it. Right now, it says it’s 7 feet to the left, and likely on another floor, which would put it in my guest-room closet.

Lost-item trackers, the high-tech savior of the forgetful, aren’t new. Attach these small Bluetooth-powered doodads to the items you fear you might lose—keys, wallet, bag, pet—and they communicate their whereabouts to your phone. Tile, one of the pioneers in the space, sells four different flavors for iPhone and Android, ranging from the $25 Tile Mate to the $35 Pro.

Samsung’s

got its $30 SmartTag for Galaxy phones. Now Apple’s bottle-cap-size AirTag for iPhone owners has arrived, and it topples the others in the world-wide game of hide-and-seek.

After two weeks of “losing” items with those trackers attached, the AirTags, in concert with my iPhone’s Find My companion app, proved to be the best. Whether it was a remote control squished between couch cushions or Wasabi, my on-loan drug-detection dog at the park (see video for that story), two unique Apple technologies led me right to them.

Yet Apple’s smallest gadget also further enables two big threats in today’s tech world: a giant company’s ever-expanding control and consolidation, and a vast, powerful network that could easily be abused by bad actors. Allow me to help you find your way.

Finding Nearby

These trackers work best when you’ve misplaced your stuff nearby, which was the case for me well before our long year of pandemic house arrest. (Yes, of course the glasses I’ve been looking for are on my head!)

AirTags and other lost-item trackers use low-powered Bluetooth to stay connected to your phone, potentially up to several hundred feet away. The strength and range depend on lots of factors, including obstacles that might come between…

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SonicWall Capture Service is Finding, Stopping More Than 1000 New Unique Malware Variants Each Day — A 524 … – Digital Journal

SonicWall Capture Service is Finding, Stopping More Than 1000 New Unique Malware Variants Each Day — A 524 …
Digital Journal
“SonicWall Capture ATP has proven time and again that it not only identifies new variants, but also safely contains and stops zeroday attacks. After seeing the devastating effects of WannaCry and NotPetya — and now breaches at Equifax and Deloitte …

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zero day – read more

Google to pay upto $2,00000 for finding bug in Android – Odisha Sun Times

Google to pay upto $ 2,00000 for finding bug in Android
Odisha Sun Times
Google started the bug bounty programme for Android about two years ago in which the security researchers, who demonstrate an exploit, get a cash prize — the amount of which varies based on the severity of the hack. Then, Google gets to fix the bug

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android security – read more