by Liquid Video Technologies | Apr 6, 2020 | Access Control, Cybersecurity, News, Technology News, Websites
If you use Apple iPhone or MacBook, here we have a piece of alarming news for you. Turns out merely visiting a website — not just malicious but also legitimate sites unknowingly loading malicious ads as well — using Safari browser could have let remote attackers...
by Liquid Video Technologies | Apr 3, 2020 | Access Control, Cybersecurity, News, Security, Technology News
Employers are responding to COVID-19 by allowing, and even mandating remote working. Companies ranging from Amazon, Microsoft and Google to local design shops have asked employees to work from home. While increasingly common even before the virus, remote work brings...
by Liquid Video Technologies | Apr 1, 2020 | Access Control, Cybersecurity, News, Security, Technology News
Preying on public fears, the ongoing coronavirus outbreak is proving to be a goldmine of opportunity for attackers to stage a variety of malware attacks, phishing campaigns, and create scam sites and malicious tracker apps. Now in a fresh twist, third-party Android...
by Liquid Video Technologies | Mar 30, 2020 | Access Control, Cybersecurity, Data Breaches, News, Security, Technology News
A newly discovered watering-hole campaign is targeting Apple iPhone users in Hong Kong by using malicious website links as a lure to install spyware on the devices. According to research published by Trend Micro and Kaspersky, the “Operation Poisoned News”...
by Liquid Video Technologies | Mar 27, 2020 | Access Control, Cybersecurity, Data Breaches, News, Security, Security Breach, Technology News
Open Exchange Rates, a public API, has sent a notification of data breach to its customers, announcing that hackers had access to their systems and data for a month. According to the notification, provided by Sylvia van Os, a Linux and Open Source engineer/consultant,...
by Liquid Video Technologies | Mar 25, 2020 | Access Control, Cybersecurity, Data Breaches, News, Security, Security Breach, Technology News
More than 200 million records containing a wide range of property-related information on US residents were left exposed on a database that was accessible on the web without requiring any password or authentication. The exposed data — a mix of personal and demographic...
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