Tag Archive for: ‘win’

National win for third grade artist


Smiling photo of Leila Walton, third-grade student at Ashland Elementary School, with her hands on her hips displayed on an aqua background with her winning cyber safety poster angled in the top right corner

Update May 11, 2022: A big congratulations to Leila Walton, third-grade student at Ashland Elementary School! The Virginia Information Technologies Agency (VITA) and the Virginia Department of Education (VDOE) has announced her as a national winner in the 2022 Multi-State Information Sharing and Analysis Center’s (MS-ISAC) annual Kids Safe Online Poster Contest. View the VITA news release

Congratulations to Leila Walton, third-grade student at Ashland Elementary School, who is a Virginia finalist in the 2022 Multi-State Information Sharing and Analysis Center (MS-ISAC) National Poster Competition. The Virginia contest is sponsored by the Virginia Information Technologies Agency (VITA) in conjunction with MS-ISAC. Leila’s original artwork illustrating an internet safety message was one of the top five chosen in her K-5 category. Her poster now advances to the national Multi-State Cyber Security Awareness poster contest, competing to be one of 13 that will be selected for display in the Kids Safe Online Activity Book. This book will be distributed throughout the U.S., and in campaigns to raise awareness among children of all ages about internet and computer safety.


Leila chose to illustrate the steps for creating a secure password as her poster’s focus, which she explained is important because it helps prevent others from getting access to your account. Leila heard about the contest opportunity from her art teacher, Lisa Keen.

“When I heard that there was a cyber security poster contest, I knew I had to enter because I’m an artist,” said Leila. “I love to make art. Ms. Keen always says, ‘Try your best and forget the rest,’ so that’s what I did. I’m really excited to be a finalist! My uncle works in cyber security, and he taught me how to make a strong and secure password. I hope my poster helps other people to have strong passwords.”

As her classmates looked on, Ashland Elementary School Principal Anna Houseworth presented Leila with an award of excellence certificate from VITA. Houseworth read the accompanying congratulatory letter aloud to Leila.

In her own remarks about the safe and secure use of the internet that VITA promotes, Houseworth reminded all the…

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Pelicans, Hawks win play-in games to reach NBA playoffs


LOS ANGELES (AP) — Brandon Ingram scored 30 points and the New Orleans Pelicans overcame a 13-point deficit in the fourth quarter to beat the depleted Los Angeles Clippers 105-101 in a play-in Friday night and earn the No. 8 seed in the Western Conference playoffs.

CJ McCollum added 19 points for New Orleans, which will play No. 1 seed Phoenix in the first round. Game 1 is Sunday in the desert.

The Pelicans made the playoffs for the first time since 2017-18, guided by first-year coach Willie Green, a former Clipper. They’ve been without Zion Williamson all season because of a foot injury.

The Clippers were dealt a huge blow earlier in the day when Paul George entered the league’s health and safety protocols. They’d already been without Kawhi Leonard all season while he rehabbed an ACL injury. He watched from the bench early in the game.

Marcus Morris and Reggie Jackson each had 27 points for the Clippers.

HAWKS 107, CAVALIERS 101

CLEVELAND (AP) — Trae Young scored 32 of his 38 points in the second half and Atlanta overcame the loss of center Clint Capela to a knee injury to beat Cleveland for the Eastern Conference’s No. 8 playoff seed.

Bogdan Bogdanovic added 19 points for Atlanta. The Hawks will play No. 1 seed Miami in the first round. Game 1 is Sunday in South Florida.

Young scored 16 points in third quarter to rally the Hawks from a 10-point halftime deficit, and added another 16 in the fourth to finish off the Cavaliers.

Capela hyperextended his right knee late in the first half. The 6-foot-10 center will have an MRI exam in Miami.

Lauri Markkanen scored 26 points for Cleveland. Darius Garland added 21.

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A strategy to win the ransomware war


Our leaders on Capitol Hill, the national media (“60 Minutes” on Sunday), and the world are finally starting to recognize that ransomware is a massive national security risk.

Why it took years to get to this point? No idea.

I guess when you take away our meat and fuel (everyone in gas-crazy Florida knows about Colonial), Americans start paying attention; not just paying attention, but creating a Justice Department Ransomware Task Force.

On our podcast last week, my exact words were: “Follow what President (Ronald) Reagan did with terrorists, and do not negotiate or pay ransoms to them — ever.”

If you read my columns over the past 10 years, one in four is about cybercrime and usually, ransomware is in the mix.

What’s new with these threats, besides making an appearance on 60 Minutes and being discussed by the White House?

What’s new is that people keep paying the ransom; more hacking groups are getting in the mix because it is extremely lucrative.

We have seen the payouts and we have to stop paying them, CNA Insurance paid out $40 million and Colonial $5 million. Even if you bribe to pay to your host government, those are some steep margins for setting up some email blasts loaded with malware.

Hackers are getting more creative/devious with these attacks; not only do the latest strains encrypt your data, but they also steal it.

Essentially, there’s double extortion going on: First you pay to get the encryption keys back to unlock your data. If you have rock-solid data backups and wipe and reload your systems so you don’t have to pay to get the keys. But if you have private and sensitive info, you might be tempted to pay to stop the release of the data where it might end up for sale on the dark web.

Granted, there is no guarantee that the criminals will give you encryption codes nor any assurances that they will not release your stolen info regardless, especially if you have valuable data, like Social Security numbers, state secrets, credit card numbers, etc.

By the numbers, a report from Cybersecurity Ventures says ransomware damages would cost the world $5 Billion USD in 2017, up from $325 million in 2016 and rocketing to $20 billion in 2021. That’s approx. 57…

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New behavioral biometrics FIDO certification, developer tool, customer win revealed


digital identity KYC security

Zighra’s behavioral biometrics for decentralized continuous authentication have been certified by the FIDO Alliance, with the company claiming it is the first on-device behavioral biometrics solution confirmed to the FIDO standard.

The combination of AI, biometrics and behavioral analytics provides continuous protection against phishing and fraud in both conventional and zero-trust systems, the company says. The technology is available as a workforce app for secure logical access, and can help organizations comply with GDPR and the California Consumer Privacy Act.

“Now, with FIDO certification, Zighra adds tremendous value to meet the growing contactless-access needs of current and post-COVID work and lifestyles,” says Deepak Dutt, CEO of Zighra. “Our unique, patented solution provides powerful security controls to continuously protect enterprises and users, across devices, all with a seamless experience.”

The USPTO recently granted Zighra a patent for passwordless authentication with its behavioral biometrics.

Incognia launches free Developer Edition

Incognia has made its location-based behavioral biometrics available for free to mobile app developers to help them build its fraud prevention capabilities into fintech and mobile commerce apps.

The Developer Edition of Incognia’s technology provides rapid SDK integration of frictionless fraud prevention, according to the announcement, which works silently in the background to detect compromised devices. The new edition includes thousands of free API requests per month, and mobile apps with larger user bases can move to Incognia’s paid enterprise solution.

“Mobile adoption and contactless payments are fueling the growth of mobile apps that process payments and need fraud detection. Along with growth in mobile app usage is growing demand for frictionless mobile experiences that are also secure. We’re excited to launch our developer offering to allow mobile app developers access to frictionless identity verification and authentication features for mobile users,” comments André Ferraz, founder and CEO of Incognia. “With the free Incognia Developer Edition, companies of any size will be able to…

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