Tag Archive for: Talking

Talking Points: Protecting yourself from cyber security threats (part 3)


Talking Points: Protecting yourself from cyber security threats (part 3) – CBS Minnesota


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In the past few weeks, Minneapolis Public School data has been stolen by a hacker and put on the dark web. If it can happen here, can it happen anywhere? For decades, listeners could count on WCCO’s Tech Talk anchor Doug Swinhart to answers their computer questions. Swinhart shared tips to recognize phishing scams and how to browse the web with common sense.

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Mobile Application Security Testing Market Research by Business Analysis, 2022-2030 – Talking Democrat


mobile-application-security-testing-market/

Mobile Application Security Testing Market Outlook:

Global Mobile Application Security Testing Market report includes market objectives and scopes during the forecast period by highlighting key segments, trends and leading players to provide comprehensive data on the market situation, trends, segmentation and forecast development of Global Mobile Application Security Testing market. The research report involves an in-depth study of the overall state of the industry, and industrial policies & constraints, changing market dynamics and their impact across the globe.

Get FREE PDF Sample of the Report @ https://marketstrides.com/request-sample/mobile-application-security-testing-market

Some of the prominent players in the global Mobile Application Security Testing market are
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Accenture (Republic of Ireland)_x000D_
IBM (US)_x000D_
Micro Focus (UK)_x000D_
Veracode (US)_x000D_
Synopsys (US)_x000D_
Pradeo (France)_x000D_
Rapid7 (US)_x000D_
Tieto (Finland)_x000D_
Trustwave (US)_x000D_
WhiteHat Security (US)_x000D_
_x000D_

Mobile Application Security Testing Market research report provides an in-depth competitive emerging market analysis of the global market.
The research report includes specific segments by region (country), by manufacturers, by Type, by Application, by Market Share and by Sales Revenue. Each type provides information about the production during the forecast period of 2022 to 2030. Application segment also provides consumption during the forecast period of 2022 to 2030. Segments helps to identifying the different factors, major trends that aid the market growth. The Mobile Application Security Testing market report also provides company share analysis with respect to countries, regions and types.

Research Methodology

Our research methodology constitutes a mix of secondary & primary research which ideally starts from exhaustive data mining, conducting primary interviews (suppliers/distributors/end-users), and formulating insights, estimates, growth rates accordingly. Final primary validation is a mandate to confirm our research findings with Key Opinion Leaders (KoLs), Industry Experts, Mobile Application Security Testing includes major supplies & Independent…

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Talking Labels Aid the Blind With Prescriptions



Not for over-the-counter drugs

One drawback to these talking RFID labels is that they’re generally used for prescriptions only, and not for over-the-counter drugs.

“This one area of our advocacy has been the most challenging,” Bridges says. “Obviously, we wanted to focus first on prescription drugs because they’re the most critical to our own health.”

Neva Fairchild, national aging and vision loss specialist at the American Foundation for the Blind (AFB), uses the CVS app and sometimes braille labels for prescription drugs.

“You’d be amazed how much an ibuprofen feels like an iron pill feels like an allergy pill,” she says.

Pharmacist-recorded solution

Other companies offer additional solutions. Walgreens stores have a Talking Pill Reminder that is free for people who self-identify as visually impaired. It costs about $10 otherwise.

Dosing directions and label information that a pharmacist records are played back when you push a button on a Talking Pill Reminder, which attaches to the bottom of most prescription vials. It can record up to a 30-second description.

The Seeing AI app for the iPhone from Microsoft can read aloud the short text it sees in front of the phone’s camera, including what appears on a prescription bottle. The versatile app has other functions, such as identifying people and the denominations on currencies.

“The reason I find [Seeing AI] particularly useful is you don’t have to specifically know where the text is if you’re trying to scan a pill bottle,” Aaron Preece says. He’s editor-in-chief of AccessWorld, AFB’s technology magazine.

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Donald Trump Is Talking About Everything but the Alleged Russian SolarWinds Hack

As authorities probe a suspected Russia-led hack of government networks, President Donald Trump has been publicly silent on the matter.

Even as a slew of federal agencies acknowledged their computer systems appeared to have been affected by malware spread via Texas-based software company SolarWinds, Trump continued to tweet about a presidential election he had already lost.

With roughly a month left of his first and presumably only term in the White House, Trump claimed on Thursday, without evidence, that the outcome of the November vote was “rigged,” and suggested that the Democratic Party had somehow stolen the election.

The same day, a warning emerged from the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), saying that the SolarWinds hack posed a “grave risk” to all levels of the U.S. government, alongside critical infrastructure entities and businesses.

CISA, which operates under Homeland Security, said evidence suggested agencies had been compromised by an advanced persistent threat (APT) actor—another term given to a nation state-level cybersecurity adversary—since at least March 2020.

Trump remained silent as multiple administration officials alluded to the evidence that pointed in the direction of Russia. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo noted there had been a “consistent effort of the Russians to try and get into American servers.”

Trump remained publicly silent as the Department of Energy, which includes a division overseeing the nuclear weapons stockpile, confirmed it found malware linked to the hackers on its business networks as part of a probe happening in real-time.

And Trump did not respond publicly as his former homeland security adviser Thomas P. Bossert said the “magnitude of this ongoing attack is hard to overstate” and noted that Trump was “on the verge of leaving behind a federal government, and perhaps a large number of major industries, compromised by the Russian government.”

On December 13, then…

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