OnePlus responds to privacy fears after hacker mode found on its phones
Full coverage |
Full coverage |
Android Police |
[Update: Now in Dev Channel] ChromeOS will eventually have an automatic red-tinted Night Light mode
Android Police It may feel irrelative now, but what if in the future 3rd Party browser makers put an Anti-Trust case against Google by saying while Google is running a fledged Desktop Browser in Chrome OS, the only thing they can offer are Android Browsers which are … |
IBM’s X-Force security team discovers a high-risk vulnerability in the Android platform opening phones up to DoS and elevation of privilege vulnerabilities.
Threatpost | The first stop for security news
Mozilla wants to make private browsing truly private.
The company is testing enhancements to private browsing in Firefox designed to block website elements that could be used by third parties to track browsing behavior across sites. Most major browsers, Firefox included, have a “Do Not Track” option, though many companies do not honor it.
Mozilla’s experimental tool is designed to block outside parties like ad networks or analytics companies from tracking users through cookies and browser fingerprinting.
To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here