பிரான்ஸை சேர்ந்த ஓரீ என்கிற நிறுவனம் மரக்கட்டைகளின் கம்ப்யூட்டர் கீ
போர்டுகளை தயாரிக்கிறது. விலை 150 யூரோவிலிருந்து தொடங்குகிறது. போனுக்கு
மர உறைகளையும் இந்த நிறுவனம் வடிவமைக்கிறது.
This new Android malware steals Facebook data directly from the device Facebook is no stranger to spreading of scams and installation of malicious malware on its platform. Thanks to its large user base, the popular social media networking site has always been the favorite of cybercriminals and hackers. In a newly identified scam detected by security company Symantec, a malicious app dubbed ‘Android.Fakeapp’, involves a new malware strain that is phishing for Facebook login credentials directly from the targeted devices. Once the Facebook user credentials are obtained, the malware logs into the account and collects account information and results using the Facebook mobile app’s search functionality. According to the researchers, the Fakeapp malware is currently made available via malicious apps to English-speaking users on third-party app stores. How does the Fakeapp malware work? Once installed, the apps infected with the Fakeapp malware will immediately hide from ...
Smartphones store your email, your photos and your calendar. They provide access to online social media sites like Facebook and Twitter, and even your bank and credit card accounts. And they're keys to something even more private and precious – your digital identity. Through their role in two-factor authentication systems, the most commonly used secure digital identity protection method , smartphones have become essential to identifying people both online and off. If data and apps on smartphones are not secure, that is a threat to people's identities, potentially allowing intruders to pose as their targets on social networks, email, workplace communications and other online accounts . As recently as 2012, the FBI recommended the public protect their smartphones' data by encrypting it. More recently, though, the agency has asked phone makers to provide a way to get into encrypted devices , what police call "exceptiona...
Identity theft reached new heights in 2017, especially in terms of non-credit card-based fraud. In response, public interest in information security has been growing slowly but surely, especially with regard to the threat of identity theft. Unfortunately, one major concept has gotten muddled somewhere down the line: the IP address. If you were to go by the indications of news reports and TV shows, you’d probably think of an IP address as something of a digital signature that allows you to pick out a single person from the immense population of the internet. That much is more or less correct. You might, however, also think that with an IP address, you can dredge up a user’s personal details and pinpoint their location. That’s only sort of correct. While an IP address is a useful thing to know, on its own, it’s an innocuous piece of information that’s more technical than personal. A proper understanding of it is important for online safety, so let’s take a closer look at what an ...
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