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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A civil-liberties group has sued the office for records of proposals for national identification systems.
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Democrats, Republicans clash over alleged eavesdropping, and that could mean trouble for Gov. Mark Warner.
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The chips store telephone numbers and information about previous medications.
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More than 400 employees with access to the finance system didn't change generic passwords.
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The resignation means Iowa's crime lab has no one certified to recover evidence from computer hard drives.
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The company had fought a court order requiring it to monitor customers' viewing habits.
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Graduate students and faculty work for state agencies
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Chinese now have access to three foreign news organizations, but authorities won't say how long the access will last.
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The bill would help identity-theft victims access the business records related to the theft of their identity.
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Though progress has been made, the House and Senate versions of the bill differ on how grants will be distributed to states and local governments.
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The legislation gives consumers more control over how and when personal information is shared.
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From Orange County. Submit by 6/4/2002.
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From New York State Thruway Authority. Submit by 6/19/2002.
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From Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. Submit by 6/18/2002.
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From Los Angeles Unified School District. Submit by 6/10/2002.
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