Rafael SalazarMicrosoft Exchange China-Linked Hack Hits Thousands of Microsoft Customers The Wall Street Journal. - Robert McMillan, Dustin VolzA cyberattack on Microsoft Corp.’s Exchange email software is believed to have infected tens of thousands of businesses, government offices and schools in the U.S., according to people briefed on the Many...
Rafael SalazarSecurity Apple Is Going to Make It Harder to Hack iPhones With Zero-Click Attacks verified_publisherVICE - Lorenzo Franceschi-BicchieraiMultiple exploit developers tell Motherboard an upcoming change in iOS could make zero-click exploits harder to pull off. Apple is going to make one of the most powerful types of attacks on iPhones much...
Rafael SalazarIOS 14 Hands-on: These are all of the new Music app features in iOS 14.5 - 9to5Mac verified_publisher9to5Mac - Filipe EspósitoThe first iOS 14.5 beta was released earlier this month to developers with several new features, and iOS 14.5 beta 2 arrived this week with even more changes. Among the new features, Apple has made some...
Rafael SalazarProductivity Intel picks and chooses benchmarks as the threat from Apple Silicon grows - 9to5Mac verified_publisher9to5Mac - Chance MillerThe first M1 Macs have been out in the wild for nearly three full months, and the fear is setting in at Intel. The company this week shared a detailed slideshow of benchmark results with Tom’s Hardware...
Rafael SalazarFacebook and Google's News Fight with AustraliaBy TechAustralia is pushing to force two of the biggest tech companies to pay for the content its news publishers produce. This isn't the first time that governments have sparred with Facebook and Google over this issue, but Australia is coming close to being the first to succeed. Both companies warn that they could withdraw entirely if a law is passed. Read on to explore why Australia has become so protective of its news industry.