Security Leftovers
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Security updates for Friday
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A new approach to security instrumentation
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Quantum Mechanics Could Solve Cryptography’s Random Number Problem
Peter Bierhorst’s machine is no pinnacle of design. Nestled in the Rocky Mountains inside a facility for the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the photon-generating behemoth spans an entire building. Its lasers, mirrors, and lenses are split among three laboratories, two of them at opposite ends of the L-shaped building. The whole thing is strung together with almost 900 feet of optical fiber. “It’s a prototype system,” the mathematician explains. “Something might drift out of alignment, and the whole thing stops working. It might take a few days to figure out what went wrong.”
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Fake “Have I Been Pwned” Wants Bitcoin For Not Leaking Your Passwords
Much to the concern of many users, a fake website similar to HIBP has popped up on the internet. The site claims to contain a database of over 1.4 billion compromised user accounts and associated passwords.
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The Top 10 Sessions to Catch at RSA Conference 2018
RSA Conference 2018 boasts a dizzying array of security vendors in exhibit halls and industry luminaries in sessions spread out across the multiple San Francisco venues where the event will be held next week.
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How to Scale Security with a Hardware Chain of Trust
CISOs are notoriously risk-averse and compliance-focused, providing policies for IT and development teams to enforce. By contrast, in the name of serving business outcomes, App Dev leaders want to eliminate DevOps friction wherever possible. What approach satisfies those conflicting demands while accomplishing the end goal: at-scale security?
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How safe are apps built on Open Source? Is security traded for efficiency? [Ed: This is the anti-FOSS lobby pretending that proprietary software lacks bugs (not to mention back doors) and disguises marketing as "research"]
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digiKam 7.7.0 is releasedAfter three months of active maintenance and another bug triage, the digiKam team is proud to present version 7.7.0 of its open source digital photo manager. See below the list of most important features coming with this release. |
Dilution and Misuse of the "Linux" Brand
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Samsung, Red Hat to Work on Linux Drivers for Future TechThe metaverse is expected to uproot system design as we know it, and Samsung is one of many hardware vendors re-imagining data center infrastructure in preparation for a parallel 3D world. Samsung is working on new memory technologies that provide faster bandwidth inside hardware for data to travel between CPUs, storage and other computing resources. The company also announced it was partnering with Red Hat to ensure these technologies have Linux compatibility. |
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