Cybersecurity
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From compromised TVs to AI-powered house chores, exploring the evolving global threats and why human-centric security matters more than ever.
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While overall ransomware attack numbers remained steady, higher education institutions drove a sharp rise in exposed records, fueled in part by third-party software vulnerabilities.
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To guard against phishing-based ransomware attacks, the state is outfitting 161 of its jurisdictions and other public-sector organizations with hardware-based protection. And it's not alone.
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Orange County, Calif., has launched an interactive Web site that provides the approximate locations of all serious and high-risk sex offenders in the county.
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The White House recently cited the CyberSmart School Program as a national cyber security resource for teachers.
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The Red Cross will respond to disasters with trucks full of technology.
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Unisys generates 3-D images from individuals' photographs to identify by skin texture, expressions and aging.
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The Washington city teams with Class Software Solutions on an Integrated Payment System.
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Facial recognition system will scan visitors to House of Corrections.
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A bigger battle, getting the new agency off the ground, may be looming for the next Congress and the president.
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The company believes a new type of partnership between the public and private sectors is coming.
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Private and public entities collaborate to publish benchmarks for Internet security.
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The intelligence agency will now have to work with state and local law enforcement agencies; something that's not happened in the past.
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From forming political action committees to creating special business units, companies are jockeying for position to secure potentially valuable contracts.
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The case hinges on whether posting code to break encryption software is free speech.
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The three alleged identity thieves have victimized more than 30,000 people, according to authorities.
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President Bush's plan lays out March 1, 2003, as the date that the new department will take shape.
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An additional 10,000 people could have been victimized by the identity thieves arrested this week.
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The federal government will divulge information to the ACLU and several other groups by the middle of January.
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Amnesty International is calling for the Chinese government to release 33 prisoners.
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