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Fast Company | While Google has spent years insisting that users are in control of their privacy, it’s never given users a way to wipe old data automatically. If you wanted to keep Google from building up a lifetime of personal information without opting out of personalized features entirely, you had to remind yourself to delete the data on your own. That’s about to change. |
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CIO Dive | The temperament of the market is just half the battle. Slack needs paying customers to support its viability on the market and in the enterprise. |
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ZDNet | The cloud giants continue to surge ahead, but as customers get more sophisticated these tech companies will have to change their strategies. |
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Medium | "Even highly targeted users like politicians and activists don’t fully appreciate the scourge of phishing, and many aren’t familiar with an emerging form of two-factor authentication known as 'security keys' that we hope can stop it in its tracks. To that end, here’s a brief primer adapted from my Twitter post on phishing, security keys, and online threats," writes Mark Risher, director of product management at Google. |