The Hacker News | Cybersecurity researchers yesterday uncovered a new high-severity hardware vulnerability residing in the widely-used Wi-Fi chips manufactured by Broadcom and Cypress—apparently powering over a billion devices, including smartphones, tablets, laptops, routers, and IoT gadgets.
ZDNet | 90% of all stolen credentials on the Genesis Store came from the AZORult malware. Now, the malware doesn't work in Chrome 80.
Computerworld | If you let Windows update itself with this month’s Patch Tuesday crop, you got a buggy UEFI patch that’s subsequently been pulled and a Win10 1903/1909 patch that jiggered profiles—think missing icons, desktops, files—on many machines.
Infosecurity | Trend Micro blocked over 52 billion unique cyber-threats in 2019, 61 million of which were ransomware, according to its annual roundup report. The security firm revealed that email remained by far the most popular threat vector, accounting for 91% of all threats. It detected 15% more email threats than in 2018, including a 5% increase in BEC detections.
How-To Geek | You might have heard the term “encryption backdoor” in the news recently. How-To Geek will explain what it is, why it’s one of the most hotly contested topics in the tech world, and how it could affect the devices you use every day.
The Enterprisers Project | The key to leading a productive meeting rather than a time-waster? Organization. Consider these tips before you schedule your next meeting.
SAASupdate
The Keyword | Another day with no SaaS updates. However, Google Translate has added five more languages.
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