Social Engineering: “Die Mitarbeiter sind unsere Verteidigung”

Prävention reicht nicht gegen Social Engineering und die derzeitigen Trainings sind nutzlos, sagt der Sophos-Sicherheitsexperte Chester Wisniewski. Seine Lösung: Mitarbeiter je nach Bedrohungslevel schulen – und so schneller sein als die Kriminellen. E…

Prävention reicht nicht gegen Social Engineering und die derzeitigen Trainings sind nutzlos, sagt der Sophos-Sicherheitsexperte Chester Wisniewski. Seine Lösung: Mitarbeiter je nach Bedrohungslevel schulen - und so schneller sein als die Kriminellen. Ein Interview von Moritz Tremmel (Social Engineering, Spam)

Videostreaming im Abo: Disney+ hat 10 Millionen Abonnenten

Disney+ hat direkt nach dem Start 10 Millionen Abonnenten gewonnen. Analysten hatten so viele Kunden erst nach einem Jahr erwartet. Noch ist aber unklar, ob sie dem Dienst treu bleiben werden. (Disney, Apple TV)

Disney+ hat direkt nach dem Start 10 Millionen Abonnenten gewonnen. Analysten hatten so viele Kunden erst nach einem Jahr erwartet. Noch ist aber unklar, ob sie dem Dienst treu bleiben werden. (Disney, Apple TV)

Google Cache: Google plant Girokonten

Google will seinen Nutzern zusammen mit der Citigroup kostenlose Girokonten mit dem Namen Google Cache anbieten. Konkurrent Apple hat in Kooperation mit Goldman Sachs bereits eigene Kreditkarten im Portfolio. (Google, Google Play)

Google will seinen Nutzern zusammen mit der Citigroup kostenlose Girokonten mit dem Namen Google Cache anbieten. Konkurrent Apple hat in Kooperation mit Goldman Sachs bereits eigene Kreditkarten im Portfolio. (Google, Google Play)

E-Auto-Produktion: Volkswagen baut seine Gigafactory in den USA

Volkswagen will künftig auch in den USA Elektroautos bauen und hat eine Erweiterung seines Werkes in Chattanooga im US-Bundesstaat Tennessee bekanntgegeben. Die Ankündigung erfolgt fast zeitgleich zur Entscheidung Teslas, in der Nähe Berlins Elektroaut…

Volkswagen will künftig auch in den USA Elektroautos bauen und hat eine Erweiterung seines Werkes in Chattanooga im US-Bundesstaat Tennessee bekanntgegeben. Die Ankündigung erfolgt fast zeitgleich zur Entscheidung Teslas, in der Nähe Berlins Elektroautos, Akkus und Antriebe zu bauen. (Elektroauto, Technologie)

Apple: Mac Pro und Pro Display XDR werden ab Dezember verkauft

Apple hat einen Veröffentlichungszeitraum für den modularen Mac Pro und den Bildschirm Pro Display XDR bekanntgegeben. Die im Juni 2019 angekündigten Geräte lassen sich ab Dezember bestellen. (Mac Pro, Apple)

Apple hat einen Veröffentlichungszeitraum für den modularen Mac Pro und den Bildschirm Pro Display XDR bekanntgegeben. Die im Juni 2019 angekündigten Geräte lassen sich ab Dezember bestellen. (Mac Pro, Apple)

Moto Razr 2019 is official: A foldable smartphone with no display crease

One of the most iconic flip phones ever is rebooted as a $1,500 foldable smartphone.

It's Moto Razr day today. The phone stopped by the FCC earlier in the day, and after sending out an event invite for November 13, Motorola just barely made it in time, with an official announcement at 11pm ET. The rumors were true: the Moto Razr is a reboot of one of the most iconic flip phones of all time, updated for 2019. Instead of a tiny screen and a physical keypad on the inside, you get a giant folding OLED display that puts the new Moto Razr in the same category as other futuristic foldables like the Samsung Galaxy Fold and Huawei Mate X. The price is also in the same stratosphere as those super-expensive devices: the new Razr is $1,500. It's also a Verizon exclusive in the US.

The hinge design of the Moto Razr is probably the most interesting thing about it. The best Samsung can currently do in the foldables space is the Galaxy Fold, which, thanks to folding the display nearly completely flat, develops a permanent crease in the display after the first fold. Motorola's display doesn't fold completely flat though—there is a large void space around the display hinge, so when the phone folds in half, the display has room to move around. Since it's not being sandwiched between two solid plates, the display collapses into a gentle curve instead of a hard crease. Imagine bending a piece of paper in half just by pinching the top and bottom together versus pressing the fold into a crease.

Motorola described how a hinge like this could work in a 2018 patent. Instead of having the hinge mechanism behind the display, like on the Galaxy Fold, Motorola has the hinge on the left and right side of the display, giving the display room to sink into the phone body and bend into a gentle curve. For support Motorola says the hinge "includes moveable support plates that rigidly support the display when the phone is open, but collapse out of the way when the phone is closed." These two design elements allow the phone to have a "zero gap" hinge while also not smashing the display into a crease.

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Blu-ray, Ultra HD Blu-ray sales stats for the week ending November 2, 2019

The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending November 2, 2019, are in. The complete series box set of an animated classic is this week’s top selling new release. Find out what series it was in our weekly DVD,…



The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending November 2, 2019, are in. The complete series box set of an animated classic is this week's top selling new release. Find out what series it was in our weekly DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales stats and analysis feature.

Breach affecting 1 million was caught only after hacker maxed out target’s storage

Hacker’s data archive file grew so big that the target’s hard drive ran out of space.

Breach affecting 1 million was caught only after hacker maxed out target’s storage

Enlarge (credit: Ryan Adams / Flickr)

The US Federal Trade Commission has sued an IT provider for failing to detect 20 hacking intrusions over a 22-month period, allowing the hacker to access the data for 1 million consumers. The provider only discovered the breach when the hacker maxed out the provider’s storage system.

Utah-based InfoTrax Systems was first breached in May 2014, when a hacker exploited vulnerabilities in the company’s network that gave remote control over its server, FTC lawyers alleged in a complaint. According to the complaint, the hacker used that control to access the system undetected 17 times over the next 21 months. Then on March 2, 2016, the intruder accessed personal information for about 1 million consumers. The data included full names, social security numbers, physical addresses, email addresses, phone numbers, and usernames and passwords for accounts on the InfoTrax service.

The intruder accessed the site later that day and again on March 6, stealing 4,100 usernames, passwords stored in clear-text, and hundreds of names, addresses, social security numbers, and data for payment cards.

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Disney+ Launched and Pirates Love It, Especially Mandalorian

Disney’s exclusive streaming service launched in three countries this week. While many new subscribers flocked to the Disney+ platform, others went to pirate sites instead. For some, this is the only way to watch the highly anticipated Mandalorian series. To Disney this shouldn’t come as a surprise and the company immediately tried to contain the damage by issuing takedown requests.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

Two years ago, when Disney announced that it would launch its own streaming service, we mused that this would keep piracy relevant.

Yes, another paid streaming service would further fragment the legitimate market. This could motivate some to keep pirating, at least part-time.

More recently research has confirmed that this is indeed a warranted concern as people have limited budgets, but money isn’t the only problem.

When Disney confirmed that the initial rollout would be limited to the United States, Canada and the Netherlands, the piracy lure only became stronger. Star Wars fans in most parts of the world currently can’t watch the highly anticipated Mandalorian series, unless they pirate.

With this in mind, we kept a close eye on the official Disney+ launch this week. There was an enormous amount of media coverage which, undoubtedly, led to a lot of legitimate subscriptions. But, at the same time, pirate sites were buzzing too.

Shortly after Disney+ opened shop the first pirated releases started to spread. First through private communities and then over at public torrent sites, cyberlockers, and not-so-legal streaming platforms. After a few hours, pirated copies of the Mandalorian were everywhere.

This doesn’t really come as a surprise. Disney+ currently uses Widevine encryption, which is similar to what other streaming services use. Downloading or ‘ripping’ these videos doesn’t appear to be too hard.

And indeed, a quick glance at various pirate sites reveals that the first Mandalorian episode, which is exclusive to Disney+, is widely available in various formats.

Over the past two days, Mandalorian has already become the most pirated TV-show, with hundreds of thousands of downloads and streams, if not more. While it is far from becoming the next “Game of Thrones,” the potential is certainly there.

The fact that Disney+ isn’t available in many countries is similar to HBO’s situation when Game of Thrones first came out. This serves as a piracy incentive. After all, people who want to watch Mandalorian in the UK, Australia, and elsewhere, have few other options than to pirate.

The limited release of Disney+ may actually breed some new pirates. Even worse, there is a chance that many of these pirates may not go legal when the streaming service officially launches in their country.

For now, Disney’s anti-piracy efforts appear to be focused elsewhere though. The company has sent takedown requests for thousands of URLs that host or link to unauthorized copies of Mandalorian. This includes notices that were sent to Google, with requests to delist these pages.

As one of the largest entertainment companies in the world, these piracy concerns shouldn’t come as a surprise to Disney. The company probably weighed the pros and cons of its actions, including the limited geographical release, as well as entering an already fragmented streaming landscape.

In today’s online streaming business, piracy is a given. Disney probably believes that running its own streaming platform will ultimately bring in more money. Piracy or not.

They may very well be right, but it will happen at the expense of others. That may include some of Disney’s competitors, but also consumers who are not willing to pirate, and those who can’t afford another subscription.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

How the FCC solves consumer problems—well, it doesn’t, really

FCC refers complaints to Internet providers, and that’s about it.

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai at a meeting, sitting in front of the FCC seal.

Enlarge / FCC Chairman Ajit Pai. (credit: Getty Images | Bloomberg)

The Federal Communications Commission's extremely hands-off approach to broadband-customer complaints has alarmed a member of Congress.

US Rep. Mike Quigley (D-Ill.) wrote a letter to FCC Chairman Ajit Pai in August after learning of a Frontier customer who was forced to pay a $10-per-month rental fee for a router despite buying his own router.

As we wrote at the time, Frontier charges customers a $10 monthly fee for routers even when the company doesn't provide one at all, saying that non-Frontier routers cause "increased complaints and more difficulty with troubleshooting." But Frontier also said it "cannot support or repair the non-Frontier equipment," so it's charging $10 a month without providing a router or providing support for non-Frontier routers.

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