The data trail you leave behind whenever you’re online is bigger – and more revealing – than you may think

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Looking for an alternative to Twitter and thinking about joining the folks flocking to Mastodon? Here’s how the two platforms compare to each other.

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Gaming can help your children build and sharpen a range of life skills that will stand them in good stead in the future

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Does VALORANT’s approach to cheating signal a turning point in how we deal with the continued hacks afflicting our hybrid world of work and play?

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Ransomware revenue plunges to $456 million in 2022 as more victims refuse to pay up. Here’s what to make of the trend.

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Hello, is it me you’re looking for? Fraudsters still want to help you fix a computer problem you never had in the first place.

The post Tech support scammers are still at it: Here’s what to look out for in 2023 appeared first on WeLiveSecurity

Don’t be the next victim – here’s what to know about some of the most common tricks that scammers use on the payment app

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It is now acceptable to find a job on a dating app!

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Note: This post is a follow-up to discussions carried out on the Mozilla “Dev Security Policy” Web PKI public discussion forum Google Group in December 2022. Google Chrome communicated its distrust of TrustCor in the public forum on December 15, 2022.

The Chrome Security Team prioritizes the security and privacy of Chrome’s users, and we are unwilling to compromise on these values.

Google includes or removes CA certificates within the Chrome Root Store as it deems appropriate for user safety in accordance with our policies. The selection and ongoing inclusion of CA certificates is done to enhance the security of Chrome and promote interoperability.

Behavior that attempts to degrade or subvert security and privacy on the web is incompatible with organizations whose CA certificates are included in the Chrome Root Store. Due to a loss of confidence in its ability to uphold these fundamental principles and to protect and safeguard Chrome’s users, certificates issued by TrustCor Systems will no longer be recognized as trusted by:

  • Chrome versions 111 (landing in Beta approximately February 9, 2023 and Stable approximately March 7, 2023) and greater; and
  • Older versions of Chrome capable of receiving Component Updates after Chrome 111’s Stable release date.

This change was first communicated in the Mozilla “Dev Security Policy” Web PKI public discussion forum Google Group on December 15, 2022.

This change will be implemented via our existing mechanisms to respond to CA incidents via:

  • An integrated certificate blocklist, and
  • Removal of certificates included in the Chrome Root Store.

Beginning approximately March 7, 2023, navigations to websites that use a certificate that chains to one of the roots detailed below will be considered insecure and result in a full page certificate error interstitial.

Affected Certificates (SHA-256 fingerprint):

This change will be integrated into the Chromium open-source project as part of a default build. Questions about the expected behavior in specific Chromium-based browsers should be directed to their maintainers.

This change will be incorporated as part of the regular Chrome release process to ensure sufficient time for testing and replacing affected certificates by website operators. Information about release timetables and milestones is available at https://chromiumdash.appspot.com/schedule.

Beginning approximately February 9, 2023, website operators can preview these changes in Chrome 111 Beta. Website operators will also be able to preview the change sooner, using our Dev and Canary channels. The majority of users will not encounter behavior changes until the release of Chrome 111 to the Stable channel, approximately March 7, 2023.

Summarizing security response of other Google products:

  • Android has removed TrustCor’s root CA certificates from the set of platform trusted certificates shipping with future operating system versions. Existing versions of Android will distrust TrustCor’s root CA certificates on a similar timeline as described above for Chrome.
  • Gmail is finalizing its action plan and updates will be made available in the future.

StrongPity’s backdoor is fitted with various spying features and can record phone calls, collect texts, and gather call logs and contact lists

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