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Visualizzazione post con etichetta IOS. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta IOS. Mostra tutti i post

giovedì 4 aprile 2024

Memory Line: quando scrivevo su riviste su iOS security

Questa anche non la ricordavo, 2013 in quel periodo ne scrivevo di robe inutili 🙂 ma oggi ero in vena di ricercarmi, lol 🙂 per non dimenticare ovvy che oramai alla mie età … e si parla ancora di QR code

iOS Hacking

iOS Application Hacking, a rising star
By Antonio Ieranò, VP – Security Analyst and R&D Advisor at KBE Intelligence 
Mobile computing is a reality and mobile security is an obvious consequence. As we all are aware the market is nowadays divide into 3 main stream: Android, iOS and the others. Although Android is under the spotlight since its birth because of its security issues, and the issues related to the several “fork” that android generated to every single phone vendor, think of the HTC security issues last year for example, also iOS is becoming a target for malware, hacking and security concerns.

mercoledì 23 settembre 2015

A Fight for the future message: The following companies just betrayed billions of people.

The following companies just betrayed billions of people.

Apple, Microsoft, Adobe, Symantec, and a handful of other tech companies just began publicly lobbying Congress to pass the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act (CISA), a bill that would give corporations total legal immunity when they share private user data with the government and with each other. Many of these companies have previously claimed to fight for their users’ privacy rights, but by supporting this bill they’ve made it clear that they’ve abandoned that position, and are willing to endanger their users’ security and civil rights in exchange for government handouts and protection.

Tell them why they’re on the wrong side of history.

Fight for the Future will deliver your email and send you campaign updates. Privacy

Thanks for taking action!

We’re up against some of the most powerful corporate lobbyists in the country, but that hasn’t stopped us before. If a critical mass of citizens speak out against CISA, our voices will be impossible to ignore.

We are boycotting Salesforce / Heroku. Click here to learn more.

What does it take for some of the biggest competitors in the tech industry to put their differences aside and sign a letter endorsing a hugely unpopular surveillance bill? Sweeping legal immunity. Worse, these companies know that their customers hate CISA, and so they’re jumping into the water together, hoping there’s safety in numbers. After all, you can’t blame Microsoft if Apple is doing the same thing, right?

What’s wrong with CISA?

If you’re not up to speed, CISA is a mass surveillance bill posing as a “cybersecurity” bill. Congress has been blindly scrambling to react to the OPM hacks, and their solution is a giveaway to the NSA and giant corporations:

  • All privacy policies effectively null and void. Companies can share any private user data with the government, without a warrant, as long as the government says it is being used for a “cybersecurity” purpose.
  • Data is shared with a wide array of government agencies, from the FBI and NSA, to the IRS and local law enforcement.
  • In exchange, companies are given blanket immunity from civil and criminal laws, like fraud, money laundering, or illegal wiretapping (if a violation was committed or exposed in the process of sharing data).
  • Companies that play along can get otherwise classified intelligence data from the government, including private information about their competitors.

To learn more about CISA, click here.

Dial 985-222-CISA to call Congress now.

Internet users demand meaningful cybersecurity legislation, not more mass surveillance. Millions have already spoken out, and there’s still time to send Congress a clear message. Please call your representatives, and share this page to spread the word!

A Fight for the future message: The following companies just betrayed billions of people.

The following companies just betrayed billions of people.

Apple, Microsoft, Adobe, Symantec, and a handful of other tech companies just began publicly lobbying Congress to pass the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act (CISA), a bill that would give corporations total legal immunity when they share private user data with the government and with each other. Many of these companies have previously claimed to fight for their users’ privacy rights, but by supporting this bill they’ve made it clear that they’ve abandoned that position, and are willing to endanger their users’ security and civil rights in exchange for government handouts and protection.

Tell them why they’re on the wrong side of history.

Fight for the Future will deliver your email and send you campaign updates. Privacy

Thanks for taking action!

We’re up against some of the most powerful corporate lobbyists in the country, but that hasn’t stopped us before. If a critical mass of citizens speak out against CISA, our voices will be impossible to ignore.

We are boycotting Salesforce / Heroku. Click here to learn more.

What does it take for some of the biggest competitors in the tech industry to put their differences aside and sign a letter endorsing a hugely unpopular surveillance bill? Sweeping legal immunity. Worse, these companies know that their customers hate CISA, and so they’re jumping into the water together, hoping there’s safety in numbers. After all, you can’t blame Microsoft if Apple is doing the same thing, right?

What’s wrong with CISA?

If you’re not up to speed, CISA is a mass surveillance bill posing as a “cybersecurity” bill. Congress has been blindly scrambling to react to the OPM hacks, and their solution is a giveaway to the NSA and giant corporations:

  • All privacy policies effectively null and void. Companies can share any private user data with the government, without a warrant, as long as the government says it is being used for a “cybersecurity” purpose.
  • Data is shared with a wide array of government agencies, from the FBI and NSA, to the IRS and local law enforcement.
  • In exchange, companies are given blanket immunity from civil and criminal laws, like fraud, money laundering, or illegal wiretapping (if a violation was committed or exposed in the process of sharing data).
  • Companies that play along can get otherwise classified intelligence data from the government, including private information about their competitors.

To learn more about CISA, click here.

Dial 985-222-CISA to call Congress now.

Internet users demand meaningful cybersecurity legislation, not more mass surveillance. Millions have already spoken out, and there’s still time to send Congress a clear message. Please call your representatives, and share this page to spread the word!