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Tag: secure
Hackers gonna hack -- but you're more secure than you think
2014-03-19 11:00:00| InfoWorld: Top News
We're awash in stories about catastrophic breaches and mysterious security threats that endanger computing as we know it. But is it really that bad?
HP makes printing easier, secure in BYOD environments
2014-03-17 19:13:08| Wireless - Topix.net
Web browser or Office suite? Microsoft's and Google's office productivity and collaboration clouds pit rich and complex against simple and lean more Implementing enterprise applications can be a complex undertaking for IT organizations.
Tags: makes
secure
easier
printing
HP makes printing easier, secure in BYOD environments
2014-03-17 16:15:24| InfoWorld: Top News
Using mobile devices for one-off printing tasks on office printers may not be a big deal, but Hewlett-Packard is trying to mitigate any security risk through direct wireless printing features it is bringing to enterprise printers.
Tags: makes
secure
easier
printing
Union Warns of Aviation Disaster; Qantas Engines Are Not Secure After Offshore Maintenance
2014-03-17 14:09:26| Airlines - Topix.net
Amid global focus on the aviation industry as the world waits for fresh developments about the missing Malaysian Airlines Flight 370, the aircraft engineers' union at Australia's competition watchdog, Australian Competition and Consumer Commission , has on Thursday awarded a conditional approval to the partnership of Qantas Airways with Emirates as ... (more)
Tags: maintenance
union
secure
engines
Firefox is still the least secure web browser, falls to four zero-day exploits at Pwn2Own
2014-03-17 14:09:23| Extremetech
At Pwn2Own 2014, an annual computer hackfest in Vancouver, Mozilla's Firefox has proven yet again that it's the least secure major web browser. While all four major web browsers -- Chrome, Internet Explorer, Firefox, and Safari -- were successfully exploited, for a grand total of $850,000 in prize money awarded to successful security researchers, Firefox was by far the least secure browser, racking up no less than four zero-day vulnerabilities. These vulnerabilities, if they were in the wild, would allow a hacker to do just about anything with your computer if you visited a specially crafted website.
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