There’s no doubt Google Photos is a massive landgrab for personal data — at a time when visual imagery is the biggest social currency of the web.
Source: Google Photos Reminder: Smile, It’s Free — You’re The Product! | TechCrunch
There’s no doubt Google Photos is a massive landgrab for personal data — at a time when visual imagery is the biggest social currency of the web.
Source: Google Photos Reminder: Smile, It’s Free — You’re The Product! | TechCrunch
A spam attack shed light on this virtual private network’s shady business practices.
Source: TechYou joined a botnet if you use this VPN service – Fortune
Wearing a fitness bracelet from FitBit, Jawbone, Microsoft, Withings, and others has become increasingly common. About one in ten people in the US now do some sort of fitness monitoring.
Source: What Happens to Your Data When You Monitor Your Personal Fitness | Robin Raskin
You might need to keep a closer eye than usual on your tax-related info. The Internal Revenue Service is warning that intruders stole tax data for 100,00
Source: Thieves steal tax data for 100,000 from an IRS website
Proof-of-concept malware may pave the way for future in-the-wild attacks.
Source: GPU-based rootkit and keylogger offer superior stealth and computing power | Ars Technica
If you’re a developer, installing Chrome extensions from outside the Chrome Web Store is about to get a bit harder. A little under a year ago, Google started forcing all…
Source: Google will force Chrome developers to use the Web Store
A new security vulnerability has hit data centers, but don’t worry, it’s not as bad as Heartbleed.
Source: New Venom bug hits data centers, but it’s hardly Heartbleed
“Natural body identification” could one day replace passwords and other modern methods of identification, claims PayPal developer chief
Source: PayPal wants to implant passwords in your stomach and your brain – Telegraph
Apple fails to fix a backdoor known as Rootpipe affecting all Macs, researchers claim. It had already been criticised for leaving anyone below Mac OS X Yosemite open to Rootpipe exploits, but will now have to re-engineer its patch if it wants to defend users from attacks.
Source: Failed Apple Rootpipe Fix Leaves Backdoor On All Macs, Researchers Claim – Forbes