They didn't call them a "malware manufacturer."
US authorities claimed Kaspersky allowed FSB agents to use its software as a search engine of users' PCs and look for sensitive files.
That's how an NSA leak happened, claimed the US. Kaspersky said the leak happened because the NSA agent took nation-state cyber-weapons home, which its software detected and uploaded to its servers for analysis. They also say the agent's computer had several malware infections, and other malware operations could have stolen the files and passed them to Russian intelligence.
It's a he says she says mess.
Because original Meltdown and Spectre mitigations already cover this one as well. This is a secondary layer of protection that comes with a performance impact. That's why.
No they won't come to grip with it. Political dissent has been happening since the Bronze Age. If people could get along, we wouldn't have had so many stupid (civil) wars by now.
That's not true. You can still remove individual cookies on a per site basis.
Click on the left side end of the url bar on the information button
Expand right
Click "More Information"
Security Tab
View Cookies
Remove the individual cookie you want to remove.
The option is still there. You just have to press the "Settings" button in the Cookies section. Weird choice of words, I'll admit that. Some Mozilla UI designer needs to get in trouble, that's for damn sure.
Everything in the future will sell your data. All companies are already looking at user data as cash cows. Chuck in a few lines in the ToS and you're good to go selling customers' data.
Isn't this knowledge/research kinda old? I remember hearing about this in the 90s. That's one of the reasons I never had more than 2-3 Macs in my entire life.
Via radio signals
From my Goodreads, these are the 2018 books that I gave 5 stars: Fire & Blood - George RR Martin Iron Gold - Pierce Brown
TV series: Westworld Movie: Outlaw King
Translation: Firefox now spams you with suggested extensions
I can confirm. I cried all weekend.
Uhhh... I'm disappointed. This article has some scientific work behind it. I was expecting Google to embed ultrasounds in ads ... or somethin'
This article is grossly inaccurate and blatantly wrong. https://twitter.com/videolan/s... + https://twitter.com/hanno/stat...
Except the UK already has an Internet blocklist in place... for years. Don't worry, they'll support this even after they leave.
Won't it melt before it gets there?
No. It made it tons better.
There's a GNOME browser now? :))
They didn't call them a "malware manufacturer." US authorities claimed Kaspersky allowed FSB agents to use its software as a search engine of users' PCs and look for sensitive files. That's how an NSA leak happened, claimed the US. Kaspersky said the leak happened because the NSA agent took nation-state cyber-weapons home, which its software detected and uploaded to its servers for analysis. They also say the agent's computer had several malware infections, and other malware operations could have stolen the files and passed them to Russian intelligence. It's a he says she says mess.
People should be switching to Vivaldi
Ignore my previous comment. I see they're planning to drop it, not filter it. I've re-read TFA.
This is not news, unless we've all turned our clocks back to 2016 See: https://dzone.com/articles/a-f... and http://openjdk.java.net/jeps/2...
Because original Meltdown and Spectre mitigations already cover this one as well. This is a secondary layer of protection that comes with a performance impact. That's why.
Not as bad as Facebook's
No they won't come to grip with it. Political dissent has been happening since the Bronze Age. If people could get along, we wouldn't have had so many stupid (civil) wars by now.
Don't worry about it. By that time, Nestle will be selling water to your kids. Just get filthy rich and everything will be fine.
A database that charges for every micro-SQL-transaction. Can't wait!!! #winning
Ah, the two companies I love the most getting together
That's not true. You can still remove individual cookies on a per site basis.
Click on the left side end of the url bar on the information button
Expand right
Click "More Information"
Security Tab
View Cookies
Remove the individual cookie you want to remove.
The option is still there. You just have to press the "Settings" button in the Cookies section. Weird choice of words, I'll admit that. Some Mozilla UI designer needs to get in trouble, that's for damn sure.
Everything in the future will sell your data. All companies are already looking at user data as cash cows. Chuck in a few lines in the ToS and you're good to go selling customers' data.
Isn't this knowledge/research kinda old? I remember hearing about this in the 90s. That's one of the reasons I never had more than 2-3 Macs in my entire life.