(g+) Smart Home: Mit eigenen Alexa-Skills das Heimnetzwerk steuern

Alexa, Google Assistant oder Siri brauchen die Cloud. Wir steuern IoT-Geräte ohne Cloud und ohne Zusatzkosten – mit Flask-Ask und einem Raspberry Pi. Eine Anleitung von Ulrich Schäffler (Smart Home, Fritzbox)

Alexa, Google Assistant oder Siri brauchen die Cloud. Wir steuern IoT-Geräte ohne Cloud und ohne Zusatzkosten - mit Flask-Ask und einem Raspberry Pi. Eine Anleitung von Ulrich Schäffler (Smart Home, Fritzbox)

(g+) Smart Home: Mit eigenen Alexa-Skills das Heimnetzwerk steuern

Alexa, Google Assistant oder Siri brauchen die Cloud. Wir steuern IoT-Geräte ohne Cloud und ohne Zusatzkosten – mit Flask-Ask und einem Raspberry Pi. Eine Anleitung von Ulrich Schäffler (Smart Home, Fritzbox)

Alexa, Google Assistant oder Siri brauchen die Cloud. Wir steuern IoT-Geräte ohne Cloud und ohne Zusatzkosten - mit Flask-Ask und einem Raspberry Pi. Eine Anleitung von Ulrich Schäffler (Smart Home, Fritzbox)

Garmin Instinct 2X Solar im Test: Sportuhr in Bestform

Eingebaute Taschenlampe, sehr gutes GPS und sportliche Akkulaufzeit: Die 2X entpuppt sich als bisher beste Instinct von Garmin. Von Peter Steinlechner (Garmin, Test)

Eingebaute Taschenlampe, sehr gutes GPS und sportliche Akkulaufzeit: Die 2X entpuppt sich als bisher beste Instinct von Garmin. Von Peter Steinlechner (Garmin, Test)

Sensitive data is being leaked from servers running Salesforce software

There’s disagreement about how easy it is to configure Salesforce Community.

Stylized image of rows of padlocks.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Servers running software sold by Salesforce are leaking sensitive data managed by government agencies, banks, and other organizations, according to a post published Friday by KrebsOnSecurity.

At least five separate sites run by the state of Vermont permitted access to sensitive data to anyone, Brian Krebs reported. The state’s Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program was among those affected. It exposed applicants’ full names, Social Security numbers, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, and bank account numbers. Like the other organizations providing public access to private data, Vermont used Salesforce Community, a cloud-based software product designed to make it easy for organizations to quickly create websites.

Another affected Salesforce customer was Columbus, Ohio-based Huntington Bank. It recently acquired TCF Bank, which used Salesforce Community to process commercial loans. Data fields exposed included names, addresses, Social Security numbers, titles, federal IDs, IP addresses, average monthly payrolls, and loan amounts.

Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Sensitive data is being leaked from servers running Salesforce software

There’s disagreement about how easy it is to configure Salesforce Community.

Stylized image of rows of padlocks.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Servers running software sold by Salesforce are leaking sensitive data managed by government agencies, banks, and other organizations, according to a post published Friday by KrebsOnSecurity.

At least five separate sites run by the state of Vermont permitted access to sensitive data to anyone, Brian Krebs reported. The state’s Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program was among those affected. It exposed applicants’ full names, Social Security numbers, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, and bank account numbers. Like the other organizations providing public access to private data, Vermont used Salesforce Community, a cloud-based software product designed to make it easy for organizations to quickly create websites.

Another affected Salesforce customer was Columbus, Ohio-based Huntington Bank. It recently acquired TCF Bank, which used Salesforce Community to process commercial loans. Data fields exposed included names, addresses, Social Security numbers, titles, federal IDs, IP addresses, average monthly payrolls, and loan amounts.

Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Report describes Apple’s “organizational dysfunction” and “lack of ambition” in AI

Sources say Apple’s conservative approach makes it less competitive.

A Siri logo in an iOS interface near the iPhone's dock

Enlarge / Siri, Apple's sort-of-AI assistant, pops up in iOS. (credit: Samuel Axon)

A new behind-the-scenes report in The Information details Apple's struggles to keep up with AI features and innovation amid the rise of large language models (LLMs) that drive groundbreaking tools like ChatGPT.

The article focuses on the efforts by the company's AI chief since 2018, John Giannandrea, to bring order to a fragmented AI group and make Apple more competitive with companies like Google, from which Giannandrea defected.

In some ways, The Information's piece is a roundup or a confirmation of what we already know—like Apple employees' frustrations with the limitations of Siri's underlying technology, which had been previously reported—but it calls on new sources to add additional context and depth to the narrative.

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