
Let’s travel again with our computers – and do so in a safe way
Let’s travel again with our computers – and do so in a safe way. Let’s show you how we do it. We have a process and some tools to help you.
Let’s travel again with our computers – and do so in a safe way. Let’s show you how we do it. We have a process and some tools to help you.
Spring is well and truly with us and what does that mean? Yes, we know it means spring storms, maybe a little hail or unexpected snow, but it also means spring cleaning.
You clean the house, the garage, the yard. Cleaning up all the crap that’s accumulated in the corners, under the deck, in the planters etc. Heck, you might even clean the hose windows – the actual windows on the house that you look through. I’ll get back to the other windows in a minute. So, do you do all this yourself? – or – do you call the guy who does this for you? Some or all of it – how many of you call a guy – or gal – who does the yard? Or the windows?
Adobe has patched a zero-day vulnerability used by the BlackOasis APT to plant surveillance software developed by Gamma International.
On Monday, researchers from Kaspersky Lab revealed the new, previously unknown vulnerability which has been actively used in the wild by advanced persistent threat (APT) group BlackOasis.
Adobe released security updates for Adobe Flash Player for Windows, Mac, Linux and Chrome OS. This address two critical memory corruption vulnerabilities.
It’s Patch Tuesday, so if you run Microsoft Windows or Adobe products, it’s time to patch again. Microsoft issued a dozen patch bundles to fix 54 security flaws in Windows and Adobe released a new version of its Flash Player available that addresses at least three vulnerabilities.
After millions of people were targeted in a Gmail phishing attack yesterday that used a fake Google Doc to trick users into handing over access to their email account, Google is taking steps to make sure the next attack isn’t so widespread.