All it would take is a low-level programming bug in your computer’s CPU.
Monthly Archives: April 2018
How to protect your Facebook data [UPDATED]
Facebook’s in hyper privacy-tweaking mode. Herein, how to protect your privacy now that it’s fiddled with the dials.
Tracking protection in Firefox for iOS now on by default – why this matters
Turning it on by default might sound like a mere tweak, but its the first version of the browser to do this without the user having to consciously turn it on.
Facial recognition cameras on lamp posts to be tested in Singapore
The Singapore government wants to put one on top of all 110,000 lamp posts throughout the country, to help identity all who pass by.
The ransomware that says, “I don’t want money” – play a violent game instead!
Ransomware that lets you play to pay…
Instagram bends to GDPR – a “download everything” tool is coming
The tool will let you get at your photos, videos and messages
Interview: Sarah Jamie Lewis, Executive Director of the Open Privacy Research Society
An interview with Sarah Jamie Lewis, Executive Director of the Open Privacy Research Society, a new privacy advocacy and research non-profit based in Vancouver, Canada.
Fake Hillary porn just the tip of Russia’s Reddit penetration
How Russian trolls embraced rule 34 (but Redditors didn’t buy it)
Facebook shines a little light on ‘shadow profiles’
Shadow… what now?
Update now! Microsoft’s April 2018 Patch Tuesday – 65 vulns, 24 critical
Here’s what you need to know about the April 2018 Patch Tuesday updates…
