WARNING: Google’s GMail security failure leaves my business sabotaged Published on December 24th, 2007 What would you do if a criminal stole something very personal, and very valuable from you? What if they were able to target your business and criple your income? You wouldn’t be too happy now, would you? What if you also discovered that this was happening because of a Google security infection that can affect every GMail user on the planet? That’s what has just happened to me, and here I’m going to tell you ... lire la suite
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WARNING: Google’s GMail security failure leaves my business sabotaged Published on December 24th, 2007 What would you do if a criminal stole something very personal, and very valuable from you? What if they were able to target your business and criple your income? You wouldn’t be too happy now, would you?
While editing administrator code today, Tumblr founder David Karp and developer Marco Arment inadvertently published private user data for 40 minutes. Karp reports on his blog that 27 email addresses were exposed. He told us that four accounts — including popular Tumblr blogs by Julia Allison and Pete Nidzgorski — had their passwords changed.
What is the best free email account? Google’s Gmail
Just in time for noted Internet newbie John McCain's visit to the American Association of Retired People's annual event, Life at 50 Plus, Google and the AARP produced a series of videos explaining basic Internet security tips intended for old folks. Frankly, with college students downloading malware from pop-ups and McCain's running mate and Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin's getting her email hacked, there's more than a few nonretirees who could stand to watch the whole series.
WARNING: Google’s GMail security failure leaves my business sabotaged Published on December 24th, 2007 What would you do if a criminal stole something very personal, and very valuable from you? What if they were able to target your business and criple your income? You wouldn’t be too happy now, would you?
WARNING: Google’s GMail security failure leaves my business sabotaged Published on December 24th, 2007 What would you do if a criminal stole something very personal, and very valuable from you? What if they were able to target your business and criple your income? You wouldn’t be too happy now, would you?
WARNING: Google’s GMail security failure leaves my business sabotaged Published on December 24th, 2007 What would you do if a criminal stole something very personal, and very valuable from you? What if they were able to target your business and criple your income? You wouldn’t be too happy now, would you?
Collective effort restores David Airey. com Published on December 27th, 2007 Three days ago, I reported on a GMail security flaw resulting in the theft of my domain name. Today, I am delighted, humbled and relieved, to announce that davidairey. com is now back in my possession.
David Airey. com hacked Published on December 19th, 2007 As many of you know, I left for vacation last month. In hindsight, I should’ve kept this information private. On the day I left, a hacker logged into my webhost support site and asked for the details to transfer the www.
Collective effort restores David Airey. com Published on December 27th, 2007 Three days ago, I reported on a GMail security flaw resulting in the theft of my domain name. Today, I am delighted, humbled and relieved, to announce that davidairey. com is now back in my possession.
David Airey. com hacked Published on December 19th, 2007 As many of you know, I left for vacation last month. In hindsight, I should’ve kept this information private. On the day I left, a hacker logged into my webhost support site and asked for the details to transfer the www.
Collective effort restores David Airey. com Published on December 27th, 2007 Three days ago, I reported on a GMail security flaw resulting in the theft of my domain name. Today, I am delighted, humbled and relieved, to announce that davidairey. com is now back in my possession.
Collective effort restores David Airey. com Published on December 27th, 2007 Three days ago, I reported on a GMail security flaw resulting in the theft of my domain name. Today, I am delighted, humbled and relieved, to announce that davidairey. com is now back in my possession.
David Airey. com hacked Published on December 19th, 2007 As many of you know, I left for vacation last month. In hindsight, I should’ve kept this information private. On the day I left, a hacker logged into my webhost support site and asked for the details to transfer the www.
National Lab Security Failure - We Get What We Pay For
One of the fundamental rules, which you wont read about in any security book and you can learn only through experience is that everything is in symbiosis. This means that the security models of the individual components in a system are co-dependent. For example, the security of a server is dependent on the security of the individual clients connected to it and the the security of the clients depend on the security of the servers they are interacting with.
UPDATED 6: p. m. Gartner suggested in its report that there was some unspecified, difficult way to do cut-and-paste on the iPhone, but as several commenters pointed out, cut-and-paste as most people know it is nonexistent. According to a study released by Gartner researchers this week, the newest iPhone (is it really that new anymore?
Guest post by DRJ] I’ve given up on where Obama stands on taxes, except I’m sure mine will be higher if he’s elected President. As for Social Security, the New York Times’ The Caucus valiantly attempts a summary of his many positions but the bottom line is this commentary from a nonpartisan source:
After 9/11, there was a lot of talk about how there was going to be a new boom in the airport security technology sector. People expected that investment would go into that field and we'd be seeing a lot of new innovative technologies to keep us all safer. Yet, here we are, over six years later, and there's very little in the way of new technologies hitting the market.
I got the strangest feeling of deja vu this morning. When I clicked over to Digg to see if Kevin Rose had sold out yet, I was greeted by an "Out of Service" message -- in the middle of the day. The site is back up, but it reminded me of a similar outage in January: Digg went offline in the middle of the day while "making some changes.