“Apple Requiring 2-Factor Authentication on Developer Account Holders” plus 4 BleepingComputer.com |
- Apple Requiring 2-Factor Authentication on Developer Account Holders
- Google Fixing Chrome API to Prevent Incognito Mode Detection
- Brokerage Firms Warned by FINRA Regulator of New Phishing Attack
- Ai-Powered Website Generates Realistic Human Faces On the Spot
- 18,000 Android Apps Track Users by Violating Advertising ID Policies
Apple Requiring 2-Factor Authentication on Developer Account Holders Posted: 15 Feb 2019 03:57 PM PST Users who are part of the Apple Developer program have started receiving emails that state they need to add 2-factor authentication to their accounts by February 27th, 2019. Otherwise, they will be locked out of their Developer accounts and be unable to access their Certificates, Identifiers, and Profiles. [...] |
Google Fixing Chrome API to Prevent Incognito Mode Detection Posted: 15 Feb 2019 03:12 PM PST When browsing the web with Google Chrome, some sites are using a method to determine if a visitor is in a regular browsing session or in incognito mode. As this can be considered a breach in privacy, Google will be changing how a particular API works so that web sites can no longer utilize this technique. [...] |
Brokerage Firms Warned by FINRA Regulator of New Phishing Attack Posted: 15 Feb 2019 02:44 PM PST The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) has issued an information notice to brokerage firms regarding an ongoing phishing attack which currently targets member firms with malicious spam e-mails. [...] |
Ai-Powered Website Generates Realistic Human Faces On the Spot Posted: 15 Feb 2019 10:16 AM PST A website created by Philip Wang, an Uber software engineer, and hosted at thispersondoesnotexist.com allows its visitors to generate realistic looking human faces of people that do NOT actually exist each time they hit the Refresh button. [...] |
18,000 Android Apps Track Users by Violating Advertising ID Policies Posted: 15 Feb 2019 08:52 AM PST 18K Android apps with tens or hundreds of millions of installs have been found to violate Google's Advertising ID policy guidance by collecting persistent device identifiers such as serial numbers, IMEI, WiFi MAC addresses, SIM card serial numbers, and sending them to mobile advertising related domains alongside ad IDs. [...] |
You are subscribed to email updates from BleepingComputer. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
Lexo edhe: