Author: admin

MalwareBytesSecurity

Baby monitor safety: What you need to know

Categories: Personal

Tags: baby

Tags: monitor

Tags: wi-fi

Tags: wireless

Tags: cam

Tags: webcam

Tags: camera

Tags: DECT

Tags: FHSS

Tags: cloud

Tags: storage

Tags: secure

Tags: safety

Tags: password

We take a look at some of the options available for your baby’s monitor setup. Is Wi-Fi or something else the best fit for you and your family?

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The post Baby monitor safety: What you need to know appeared first on Malwarebytes Labs.

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MalwareBytesSecurity

Black Cat ransomware group wants $4.5m from Reddit or will leak stolen files

Categories: Business

Tags: reddit

Tags: ransom

Tags: black cat

Tags: ransomware

Tags: extortion

Tags: blackmail

Tags: data

Tags: leak

Tags: breach

We take a look at news that data stolen from Reddit may be leaked soon unless the site pays a cool $4.5m to keep it offline.

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The post Black Cat ransomware group wants $4.5m from Reddit or will leak stolen files appeared first on Malwarebytes Labs.

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ScadaICSSchneider

Industrial pipeline security can prevent billions of dollars of theft

Credit to Author: Michael Braley| Date: Tue, 20 Jun 2023 11:29:00 +0000

Each day, Nigeria loses about 150,000 barrels of oil due to illegal tapping. Per month, that equates to about $1.5 billion in losses that can be prevented through pipeline third party intrusion and leak detection technology. Such losses occur worldwide. In Mexico, petroleum theft is…

The post Industrial pipeline security can prevent billions of dollars of theft appeared first on Schneider Electric Blog.

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ComputerWorldIndependent

With one June Patch Tuesday update, Microsoft falls short

I’ve tracked Microsoft’s Windows patches for years and closely watched all of the changes the company has made. I remember when you had to install updates in a certain order — and watch for which one had to be installed first. I remember the arrival of automated patching using Software Update Services (later called Windows Server Update Services). I’ve seen how we went from a system where each vulnerability was patched individually to what we now have: cumulative patching.

The ideal patch is self-contained. Install, reboot, get back to your work. It causes no side effects. It protects the operating system. And you forget about it because it does what it’s supposed to do.

To read this article in full, please click here

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