Tag Archive for: Taking

Taking Social Security numbers public could fix our data breach crisis – CNN

Taking Social Security numbers public could fix our data breach crisis  CNN

If Congress ordered the Social Security Administration to publish all active Social Security numbers, it would render them useless as authenticators, writes Mike …

“data breach” – read more

High-Severity SHAREit App Flaws Open Files for the Taking

SHAREit has fixed two flaws in its app that allow bad actors to authenticate their devices and steal files from a victim’s device.
Mobile Security – Threatpost | The first stop for security news

Meet Helm, the startup taking on Gmail with a server that runs in your home

Meet Helm, the startup taking on Gmail with a server that runs in your home

Enlarge (credit: Helm)

There’s no doubt that Gmail has changed the way we consume email. It’s free, it gives most of us all the storage we’ll ever need, and it does a better job than most in weeding out spam and malware. But there’s a cost to all of this. The advertising model that makes this cost-free service possible means some of our most sensitive messages are being scanned for clues about who we are, what we care about, and what we do both online and offline. There’s also the possibility of Google either being hacked or legally compelled to turn over contents.

On Wednesday, a Seattle-based startup called Helm is launching a service designed to make it easy for people to securely take control of their email and other personal data. The company provides a small custom-built server that connects to a user’s home or small-office network and sends, receives, and manages email, contacts, and calendars. Helm plans to offer photo storage and other services later.

With a 120GB solid-state drive, a three-minute setup, and the ability to store encrypted disk images that can only be decrypted by customers, Helm says its service provides the ease and reliability of Gmail and its tightly coupled contacts and calendar services. The startup is betting that people will be willing to pay $ 500 to purchase the box and use it for one year to host some of their most precious assets in their own home. The service will cost $ 100 per year after that. Included in the fee is the registration and automatic renewal of a unique domain selected by the customer and a corresponding TLS certificate from Let’s Encrypt.

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Biz & IT – Ars Technica

Russian hackers are taking their cyber warfare to the next level

  1. Russian hackers are taking their cyber warfare to the next level  Mashable
  2. LoJax: First UEFI rootkit found in the wild, courtesy of the Sednit group  We Live Security
  3. Full coverage

cyber warfare news – read more