Transatlantic Cable podcast, episode 77
Jeff and David take a look at a recalled smart watch in the EU, faulty webcam covers from the NSA, changes in iOS, and more.
12 articles
Jeff and David take a look at a recalled smart watch in the EU, faulty webcam covers from the NSA, changes in iOS, and more.
In the 40th edition of the Kaspersky Lab podcast, we look at Apple protecting privacy, Kim Dotcom, the World Cup, and more.
Eugene Kaspersky responds in detail to recent allegations about his company and the Russian government.
What Russian hackers, American spies, the Israeli Intelligence Service, and Kaspersky Lab have to do with each other. What is happening, anyway?
Yesterday The European Court of Justice ruled that the Safe Harbor agreement is invalid: what does this decision mean for your personal data?
New allegations against the NSA claim the group hacked into the network of the world’s largest SIM card provider, stealing encryption keys to millions of devices.
With the release of iOS 8, Apple claims it can’t access the personal data on your iPhones and iPads and it can’t give it to authorities. But it seems there’s a catch.
A new poll shows Americans care overwhelmingly about digital privacy.
Tor is an online browsing portal that keeps your web activity completely anonymous.
In the news this week: more APT campaigns, a look forward at the DEF CON and Black Hat Hacker conferences, and good and bad news for Facebook.
In the news: Microsoft’s No-IP takedown fiasco, Chinese APT groups curious about U.S. Iraq policy, Verizon says the government wants locations data, and Microsoft denies backdoor insinuations.
The list of highly touted devices that have been launched in recent years with embarrassing flaws – security and otherwise – is long and distinguished.