Security

ComputerWorldIndependent

TSMC's iPhone chip attack is a wake up call for enterprise security

Credit to Author: Jonny Evans| Date: Mon, 06 Aug 2018 05:21:00 -0700

Apple chipmaker TSMC suffered a serious WannaCry-related ransomware infection that closed down production at some of its factories. The incident should be a wake-up call for manufacturers across every industry.

Manufacturing is under attack

TSMC has said the incident was not the result of a direct attack. Instead it says its systems were exposed to the malware. “When a supplier installed tainted software without a virus scan,” it said.

The malware spread fast and impacted some of the company’s most advanced facilities used to build Apple’s A-series chips.

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ComputerWorldIndependent

How Microsoft became tech’s good guy

Credit to Author: Preston Gralla| Date: Mon, 06 Aug 2018 03:00:00 -0700

Once upon a time, Microsoft symbolized all that was wrong with the tech world: greedy, monopolistic, single-mindedly focused on profits while caring little about the public good. In the heyday of Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer, the company ran roughshod over competitors in its attempt to corral the worldwide market for both operating systems and application software.

But today, Microsoft has embraced the role of the tech world’s better angel. And as events show in recent weeks, that’s not hype. The company has, to some extent, tried to act as the industry’s conscience as well as taking actions for the greater good.

One case in point: Microsoft’s recent revelation that it had uncovered evidence that the Russian government had targeted three congressional campaigns in the upcoming midterm elections — and that it had helped thwart the plot. Microsoft discovered the attempts as part of its long-running battle against the Russian government–backed hacking cyber-espionage group called Fancy Bear. Microsoft, which has been playing whack-a-mole with the group for well over a year, targets the command-and-control servers that control malware that Fancy Bear plants on victims’ computers, as well as associated websites that install malware on targets’ computers when the victims visit them as a result of a spearphishing attack.

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ComputerWorldIndependent

Windows updaters express frustrations. Microsoft responds.

Credit to Author: Woody Leonhard| Date: Fri, 03 Aug 2018 08:56:00 -0700

No doubt you recall patching guru Susan Bradley’s open letter to Microsoft brass, summarizing the results of her Windows update survey. The results were quite damning in many ways, with complaints about the quality and frequency of patches topping the list.

Microsoft has responded to the open letter in a rather roundabout way. Two days after Computerworld posted the open letter, Bradley received an email that says:

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