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it security guru

Today, the European Commission released guidelines calling for "trustworthy AI." According to the EU, AI should adhere to the basic ethical principles of respect for human autonomy, prevention of harm, fairness and accountability. The guidelines include seven requirements -- listed below -- and call particular attention to protecting vulnerable groups, like children and people with disabilities. They also state that citizens should have full control over their data.Source: Engadget

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it security guru

Android fans are being warned about the re-emergence of a malware that’s infected millions of devices and a Google Play Store threat. Android is one of the most used pieces of software in the world with over two billion people using it each and every month. The Google mobile OS has been subject to some high-profile security threats, including the Judy malware which was spread via the Google Play Store. And now Android fans are...

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it security guru

A widely circulated security report by Symantec has claimed involvement of an Iran based hacking group in various attacks that have attempted various cyber-attacks on US and Saudi Arabian firms. The Symantec security report establishes the connection wherein Elfin widely known as APT 33, the cyber-espionage group, has been found to be formulating and executing cyber-attacks on strategic firms, located in US and Saudi. Source: Tech Sprouts

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it security guru

The Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) has proposed an independent watchdog that will write a "code of practice" for tech companies which would see Internet sites be fined or blocked if they fail to tackle "online harms" such as terrorist propaganda and child abuse. Senior managers could be held liable for breaches, with a possible levy on the industry to fund the regulator. Source: BBC

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it security guru

New variants of the sextortion scams are now attaching password protected zip files that contain alleged proof that the sender has a video recording of the recipient. While you cannot view the individual files in the archive, you can see what they are named, which can cause recipients to become scared enough to make a payment. This new sextortion variant was first reported by security site MyOnlineSecurity and is utilising email subjects like "RE: Case...

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it security guru

The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) has fined Newham Council £145,000 for inadvertently releasing the details of 200 people residing in its area who featured on a police database with a link to gang crime. The details were disclosed from the Metropolitan Police Service Gangs Matrix database when an employee sent the personal details in an attachment to 44 recipients, with both redacted and unredacted versions of the data. Source: IT Pro

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it security guru

For the past three months, a cybercrime group has been hacking into home routers --mostly D-Link models-- to change DNS server settings and hijack traffic meant for legitimate sites and redirect it to malicious clones. The attackers operate by using well-known exploits in router firmware to hack into vulnerable devices and make silent changes to the router's DNS configuration, changes that most users won't ever notice. Source: ZDNet

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it security guru

Check Point's research team tried the April Fools snake game added by Google inside the Android and iOS Google Maps apps and, after failing to play it for as long as they wanted, they reverse engineered it, stuck an auto-play AI inside, and removed the "loss" factor altogether.This happened because they were too busy researching cyber threats all day long to keep playing it for hours on end.Seriously though, they just decided to hack it...

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it security guru

Nearly half (48%) of all malicious files detected in the past 12 months were some kind of document, an email analysis by researchers at Barracuda Networks has revealed. More than 300,000 unique malicious documents were identified in the study, which researchers said indicates an alarming rise in the use of document-based malware.This trend appears to be gaining momentum, with 59% of all malicious files detected in the first quarter of 2019 being documents, compared with...

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it security guru

A recent investigation by virtualization company Bromium has discovered that US-based web servers were being used by cybercriminals to host and distribute banking trojans, information stealers and ransomware.The firm analyzed its own threat data as well as public data between May 2018 and March 2019 to reveal that malicious threats were originating from web servers in Las Vegas, Nevada registered under the name PONYNET and hosted on BuyVM data centers.BuyVM is actually owned by FranTech...

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