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Contact your host with questions, suggestions, or requests about sponsoring the AppleInsider Daily:charles_martin@appleinsider.com (00:00) - 01 - Intro (00:13) - 02 - Adobe's creative lawyers (01:21) - 03 - GM vs consumer privacy (02:43) - 04 - Corellium cries uncle (03:08) - 05 - Your neverending Beeper Block Party (03:32) - 06 - Murderbot! (04:05) - 07 - Government Cheeeeese! (click) (04:30) - 08 - Well isn't that Spacial (05:54) - 09 - Outro Links from the showAdobe faces big fines from FTC over difficult subscription cancellationGM ditching Apple CarPlay is about money, not safetyApple and Corellium settle legal dispute over virtualized iPhone softwareBeeper Mini is down for 5% of users, but there's a fixApple TV+ secures deal for 'Murderbot' sci-fi series starring Alexander Skarsgard and helmed by Weitz brothersApple inks first-look deal with David and Jessica Oyelowo's Yoruba SaxtonApple's iPhone 15 Pro transforms memories into 3D magic with Apple Vision ProSubscribe to the AppleInsider podcast on: Apple Podcasts Overcast Pocket Casts Spotify Subscribe to the HomeKit Insider podcast on:• Apple Podcasts• Overcast• Pocket Casts• Spotify
It's hard to imagine getting through the workday without relying on a mobile device. But that also makes them a valuable target for threat actors and an increasing concern for enterprise IT security administrators. A new virtualization platform improves malware research and honeypot techniques to defend against malware attacks. Guest: Amanda Gorton, Co-founder and CEO, Corellium Host: Wyatt Kash, SVP, Content Strategy, Scoop News Group This podcast was produced by Scoop News Group for The Daily Scoop Podcast and underwritten by Corellium.
Om Shownotes ser konstiga ut (exempelvis om alla länkar saknas. Det ska finnas MASSOR med länkar) så finns de på webben här också: https://www.enlitenpoddomit.se Avsnitt 414 spelades in den 9 maj och därför så handlar dagens avsnitt om: INTRO: - Alla har haft en vecka... David varit på tech show, och släpt en remix och haft musikhelg med intervju. Björn har varit i Finland, lite majsjukor/matförgiftningar, tech show, ätit lunch på vaxholms hotell, tittat på "Triangle of sadness". Johan har varit i Berlin (så att hans fru fick ta hand om flytten), och flyttat en del. BONUSLÄNK: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7322224/ FEEDBACK AND BACKLOG: - Vi måste prata om hur fantastiskt Stockholm Tech Show var! - Mobila Internet-användare https://explodingtopics.com/blog/mobile-internet-traffic ALLMÄNT NYTT - Europas stora satellitspelare går samman för att bygga Starlink-konkurrent https://computersweden.idg.se/2.2683/1.778798/europas-stora-satellitspelare-gar-samman-for-att-bygga-starlink-konkurrent DISKUSSION: - AI är ju hur coolt som helst — vad kan gå fel lixom? https://apnews.com/article/ai-artificial-intelligence-white-house-harris-578d623e473b0eeb3fa3e4728d7e9868 https://www.theverge.com/2023/5/1/23703087/ai-drake-the-weeknd-music-copyright-legal-battle-right-of-publicity https://www.businessinsider.com/grimes-split-royalties-with-ai-generated-music-using-her-voice-2023-4 https://www.buzzfeed.com/katienotopoulos/alexa-play-the-poop-song - Google "has no Moat" https://simonwillison.net/2023/May/4/no-moat/ - Om man vill testa Microsoft Designer https://designer.microsoft.com/ MICROSOFT - Mer AI i Bing och Edge https://blogs.microsoft.com/blog/2023/05/04/announcing-the-next-wave-of-ai-innovation-with-microsoft-bing-and-edge/ - Bing har nu 100M dagliga användare https://www.theverge.com/2023/3/9/23631912/microsoft-bing-100-million-daily-active-users-milestone APPLE - Apple vs Corellium https://9to5mac.com/2023/05/08/us-court-corellium-apple-ios/ - Inga Solid-State-knappar på iPhone 15 Pro. https://www.idropnews.com/news/apple-supplier-seemingly-confirms-cancellation-of-iphone-15-pro-solid-state-buttons/194622/ - BONUSLÄNK: Vad är en Solid-State-knapp? https://www.gizmochina.com/2023/04/13/what-are-solid-state-buttons-feature-iphone-15-series/ - Det går bra för Apple https://www.idropnews.com/news/apples-services-now-have-nearly-one-billion-subscribers/194600/ - Det GÅR att tappa en telefon utan att den går sönder. https://appleinsider.com/articles/23/05/06/skydivers-iphone-survives-14000-foot-fall-from-a-plane GOOGLE: - Lär dig med Google! (ibland gratis, ibland kostnad) https://blog.google/outreach-initiatives/grow-with-google/google-cybersecurity-career-certificate/ - En "nu är den säkrad" ikon var tydligen inte en bra idé om det faktiskt inte är säkert.. https://www.thurrott.com/cloud/282654/google-chrome-lock-icon-neutral-indicator TIPS: - Ett socialt nätverk som bara är till för bottar och Ais. https://chirper.ai/ PRYLLISTA - David: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00D08KW3E/ - Björn: jobbar vidare på förra veckans tema. https://chironglobal.tech/ - Johan: ett eluttag EGNA LÄNKAR - En Liten Podd Om IT på webben, http://enlitenpoddomit.se/ - En Liten Podd Om IT på Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/EnLitenPoddOmIt/ - En Liten Podd Om IT på Youtube, https://www.youtube.com/enlitenpoddomit - Ge oss gärna en recension - https://podcasts.apple.com/se/podcast/en-liten-podd-om-it/id946204577?mt=2#see-all/reviews - https://www.podchaser.com/podcasts/en-liten-podd-om-it-158069 LÄNKAR TILL VART MAN HITTAR PODDEN FÖR ATT LYSSNA: - Apple Podcaster (iTunes), https://itunes.apple.com/se/podcast/en-liten-podd-om-it/id946204577 - Overcast, https://overcast.fm/itunes946204577/en-liten-podd-om-it - Acast, https://www.acast.com/enlitenpoddomit - Spotify, https://open.spotify.com/show/2e8wX1O4FbD6M2ocJdXBW7?si=HFFErR8YRlKrELsUD--Ujg%20 - Stitcher, https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/the-nerd-herd/en-liten-podd-om-it - YouTube, https://www.youtube.com/enlitenpoddomit LÄNK TILL DISCORD DÄR MAN HITTAR LIVE STREAM + CHATT - http://discord.enlitenpoddomit.se (Och glöm inte att maila bjorn@enlitenpoddomit.se om du vill ha klistermärken, skicka med en postadress bara. :)
Ep 208Apple's former head of iCloud will be in charge of making GM EV software without CarPlayBrian Stucki ima novi projekat: OrchardResales.comThe downfall of Brydge: iPad keyboard company folds, leaving staff unpaid and customer orders unfulfillediPad Pro magnetic arm mount from KuxiuApple Announces Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro for iPad With Subscription Models30 godina BBEdita(Posle snimanja se Miki setio firme koja je pravila majice po porudžbini: American Apparel)Apple quietly drops lawsuit against former Apple Silicon exec who left company to run his own chip start-upUS court rules that Corellium is not infringing Apple's copyrights with iOS virtual machinesNew malware targeting macOS users is being sold on TelegramApple ships its first public Rapid Security Response for iOS and macOSHow to install the first-ever iOS and macOS Rapid Security ResponseExclusive interview: 1Password CEO talks about the future of password managers with passkeysHow to Lock Specific iPhone Apps Behind Face ID or Your PasscodeHow Steve Jobs saved Apple with the iMac 25 years agoZahvalniceSnimano 13.5.2023.Uvodna muzika by Vladimir Tošić, stari sajt je ovde.Logotip by Aleksandra Ilić.Artwork epizode by Saša Montiljo, njegov kutak na Devianartu.ulje-na-platnu-70x80cm-2008godina-Ronilac
On this week's show Patrick Gray and Adam Boileau discuss the week's security news. They cover: Joe Sullivan's sentencing MSI key material leak Merck to be paid in NotPetya claim The FBI takes down Turla's Snake malware operation Much, much more This week's show is brought to you by Gigamon. Chaim Mazal, Gigamon's CSO, is this week's sponsor guest. He's talking about how the company's gear is acting as a data source for network security products. Links to everything that we discussed are below and you can follow Patrick or Adam on Mastodon if that's your thing. Show notes Former Uber CSO avoids prison time for ransomware coverup | Cybersecurity Dive Merck cyber coverage upheld in NotPetya decision, seen as victory for policyholders | Cybersecurity Dive Home / Twitter Hunting Russian Intelligence “Snake” Malware | CISA Justice Department Announces Court-Authorized Disruption of Snake Malware Network Controlled by Russia's Federal Security Service | OPA | Department of Justice Iranian state-sponsored hackers exploiting printer vulnerability Iran: Fake It Till You Make It - by Tom Uren Hacktivists Target Iran's Foreign Ministry, Leak Trove Of Data New Cactus ransomware encrypts itself to evade antivirus White House considers ban on ransom payments, with caveats | Cybersecurity Dive Hamas armed wing announces suspension of bitcoin fundraising | Reuters FBI, Ukraine seize cryptocurrency exchanges for abetting cybercriminals Dallas still recovering from ransomware on eve of municipal election | Cybersecurity Dive Dallas restores core emergency dispatch systems | Cybersecurity Dive Hackers hijacked a university's emergency system to threaten students and faculty Organizations slow to patch GoAnywhere MFT vulnerability even after Clop ransomware attacks $10M Is Yours If You Can Get This Guy to Leave Russia – Krebs on Security Coming to DEF CON 31: Hacking AI models | CyberScoop Google Is Rolling Out Passkeys, the Password-Killing Tech, to All Accounts | WIRED US Court Rules for Corellium in Apple Copyright Case SafeGraph Lands US Air Force Contract After Targeting Abortion Clinics | WIRED
On this week's show Patrick Gray and Adam Boileau discuss the week's security news. They cover: Joe Sullivan's sentencing MSI key material leak Merck to be paid in NotPetya claim The FBI takes down Turla's Snake malware operation Much, much more This week's show is brought to you by Gigamon. Chaim Mazal, Gigamon's CSO, is this week's sponsor guest. He's talking about how the company's gear is acting as a data source for network security products. Links to everything that we discussed are below and you can follow Patrick or Adam on Mastodon if that's your thing. Show notes Former Uber CSO avoids prison time for ransomware coverup | Cybersecurity Dive Merck cyber coverage upheld in NotPetya decision, seen as victory for policyholders | Cybersecurity Dive Home / Twitter Hunting Russian Intelligence “Snake” Malware | CISA Justice Department Announces Court-Authorized Disruption of Snake Malware Network Controlled by Russia's Federal Security Service | OPA | Department of Justice Iranian state-sponsored hackers exploiting printer vulnerability Iran: Fake It Till You Make It - by Tom Uren Hacktivists Target Iran's Foreign Ministry, Leak Trove Of Data New Cactus ransomware encrypts itself to evade antivirus White House considers ban on ransom payments, with caveats | Cybersecurity Dive Hamas armed wing announces suspension of bitcoin fundraising | Reuters FBI, Ukraine seize cryptocurrency exchanges for abetting cybercriminals Dallas still recovering from ransomware on eve of municipal election | Cybersecurity Dive Dallas restores core emergency dispatch systems | Cybersecurity Dive Hackers hijacked a university's emergency system to threaten students and faculty Organizations slow to patch GoAnywhere MFT vulnerability even after Clop ransomware attacks $10M Is Yours If You Can Get This Guy to Leave Russia – Krebs on Security Coming to DEF CON 31: Hacking AI models | CyberScoop Google Is Rolling Out Passkeys, the Password-Killing Tech, to All Accounts | WIRED US Court Rules for Corellium in Apple Copyright Case SafeGraph Lands US Air Force Contract After Targeting Abortion Clinics | WIRED
Apple has lost its lawsuit against Corellium, a company that provides virtual iOS devices for security research purposes. The court ruled that the use of Corellium's CORSEC simulator falls under copyright law's fair use doctrine. This means that third-party virtual iOS devices are allowed and Apple cannot stop it. The ruling allows security researchers to run virtual desktops and OSs for research purposes. Concerns have been raised that developers may use Corellium's security-focused VMs to try out apps without having to acquire the related hardware. Apple tried to acquire Corellium in 2018, but was obviously unsuccessful.Apple just lost its lawsuit trying to ban iOS virtual machines | TechRadarTexas billionaire and GOP donor Harlan Crow has refused a request from Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden to detail the extent and tax treatment of luxury gifts he provided to Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. Crow's attorney argued that the inquiry "appears to be a component of a broader campaign against Justice Thomas and, now, Mr. Crow, rather than an investigation that furthers a valid legislative purpose." Democrats who control the Senate are ramping up inquiries into the relationship between Crow and Thomas and his wife, conservative activist Ginni Thomas, following reports that Thomas never reported luxury trips and other gifts funded by Crow. ProPublica also reported last week that Crow paid tuition at two private schools for Thomas's grandnephew in the late 2000s. Wyden said he is "disappointed but unsurprised" by Crow's refusal to comply and will be talking with other lawmakers on the committee about using "any tools at our disposal" to compel a response. Republicans are pushing back on Democrats' efforts, including their call for a high-court code of ethics similar to one that applies to all other federal judges.Harlan Crow Refuses Senate Request in Justice Thomas InquiryRepublican Representative George Santos, who was elected to a district in New York City and Long Island in 2022, is facing federal criminal charges over possible campaign finance violations. The charges could be unsealed as early as today and the case could be prosecuted out of the Eastern District's central office in Islip on Long Island. Santos has previously rejected calls to resign after it was revealed that he fabricated much of what he had claimed about his education and career. During the campaign, he claimed to have worked for Goldman Sachs and Citigroup, graduated from Baruch College in New York, played on a championship volleyball team and that he was Jewish, but none of those things were true. Santos was part of a Republican wave that picked up House seats in New York State during the 2022 midterm elections. With Republicans holding the House by just five seats, Santos's vote is a critical part of House Speaker Kevin McCarthy's hold on power. McCarthy said he would ask Santos to resign if he's found guilty.George Santos Faces Criminal Charges by US Justice DepartmentA quick follow-up to an earlier story wherein we covered a rare suit by the US government to enforce a patent against Gilead Sciences.Gilead Sciences has won a lawsuit brought by the US government over patents for its HIV-prevention regimens using Truvada and Descovy. The Delaware jury found the government's patents were invalid and not infringed following a five-day trial and a morning of deliberations. The US government had argued that Gilead failed to compensate the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for discovering that Truvada, first approved to treat HIV, could also help prevent infection by the virus. Gilead reported worldwide sales of more than $2 billion last year from Truvada and Descovy.Gilead Sciences prevails in US government lawsuit over HIV drug patents | ReutersSidney Powell, a former lawyer for Donald Trump, is facing a professional misconduct complaint in Michigan over a failed bid to challenge the 2020 US presidential election results. Powell and other lawyers filed a lawsuit in November 2020 claiming that widespread voter fraud undermined the legitimacy of President Joe Biden's win over Trump. The Michigan Attorney Grievance Commission filed the case on Friday, claiming the plaintiffs' lawyers brought a “frivolous lawsuit” and engaged in “conduct that is prejudicial to the administration of justice”. Powell and Wood did not immediately respond to messages seeking comment. Giuliani, Eastman and Wood are among other lawyers in Trump's orbit facing attorney misconduct claims related to election-related litigation.Trump ally Sidney Powell, others face misconduct case in Michigan | ReutersFormer President Donald Trump has been found liable for sexually assaulting writer E. Jean Carroll and defaming her by calling her a liar. This is the first verdict against him in a string of legal cases that threaten to erupt during the 2024 presidential campaign. The panel of six men and three women returned the verdict after deliberating on the civil lawsuit for less than three hours. Carroll had accused Trump of attacking her in the dressing room of a Fifth Avenue department store in the 1990s and then harming her reputation by saying she made it up when she went public with her account in 2019. He must pay her $5 million in damages, $3 million of it for defamation. The trial renewed attention on Trump's fraught history with women, and anyone who thinks women shouldn't be abused, as he embarks on another run for the White House. Despite the relatively high-profile trial, recent polls show Trump as the clear front-runner for the GOP presidential nomination. Trump's attorney Tacopina said Trump would appeal Tuesday's verdict and seek to reduce the damages. Because it was a civil rather than criminal case, and because the wealthy and powerful are rarely actually held to account, Trump was never at risk of imprisonment over Carroll's allegations. Trump Liable for Sex Abuse, Must Pay $5 Million to Carroll (2) Get full access to Minimum Competence - Daily Legal News Podcast at www.minimumcomp.com/subscribe
Contact your hostcharles_martin@appleinsider.comLinks from the showHow Steve Jobs saved Apple with the iMac 25 years agoWarren Buffett praises iPhone as an 'extraordinary product'Apple handed partial defeat in Corellium copyright appeal, but the saga isn't over yetProduction on Apple Original 'Severance' shuts down amid Writers Guild strikeApple TV+'s 'Loot' second season production stalls over writer's strikeSkydiver's iPhone survives 14,000-foot fall from a planeApple Watch calls 911 for woman suffering from widowmaker heart attackSubscribe to the AppleInsider podcast on: Apple Podcasts Overcast Pocket Casts Spotify Subscribe to the HomeKit Insider podcast on:• Apple Podcasts• Overcast• Pocket Casts• Spotify
Longtime friend of the show Bill Neifert (Corellium) joins me this week to chat about the benefits virtual modeling can bring to the world of IoT. We discuss trends in IoT system design today and how Arm and Corellium are looking to transform IoT development and testing environments with virtualization technology.
Virtual hardware modeling is not a new concept, but it's now getting a new spin, particularly when you're working with Arm-based IP cores. To understand what this means and how it can benefit an embedded developer, I spoke to Bill Neifert, the Senior Vice President of Partnerships at Corellium on this week's Embedded Executives podcast. While the Corellium partnership is with Arm, it extends out to the company's partners, as well as AWS partners.
Konferencja Oh My H@ck: https://omhconf.plKod rabatowy AdamZaprasza = 21% taniejStrona podcastu: https://z3s.pl/1337Rozmowa Kontrolowana: https://z3s.pl/live już o 2101:12 Drama z Corellium: https://www.wired.com/story/corellium-nso-group-darkmatter-apple-lawsuit/, https://www.corellium.com/blog/our-vetting-process03:19 Drama z Proofpointem: https://www.proofpoint.com/us/blog/threat-insight/nighthawk-and-coming-pentest-tool-likely-gain-threat-actor-notice, https://www.mdsec.co.uk/2022/11/nighthawk-with-great-power-comes-great-responsibility/05:14 Problemy irańskich APT: https://infosec.exchange/@Hamid/10937452566316355006:08 Prawdziwy deepfake: https://infosec.exchange/@gossithedog/10938357351892427407:36 Bugi wykryte ale nie paczowane: https://googleprojectzero.blogspot.com/2022/11/mind-the-gap.html08:35 Włosi gonią piratów: https://torrentfreak.com/police-tracked-traffic-of-all-national-isps-to-catch-pirate-iptv-users-221121/09:35 Nowy wyciek z Twittera: https://9to5mac.com/2022/11/25/massive-twitter-data-breach/11:03 Zamknięty serwis dla spooferów: https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1595715504706134016.html Mam robić więcej? Rekomenduj znajomym, subskrybuj, słuchaj, oglądaj :)
On this week's show Patrick Gray and Adam Boileau discuss the week's security news, including: Half of all UK COBRA meetings are ransomware related Ransomware biggest risk to US port security White House to move on spyware industry EU to launch its own Starlink equivalent Much, much more AttackIQ's Jonathan Reiber will be joining us in this week's sponsor interview to talk about how companies and their boards are really moving towards outcomes-based security programs. Links to everything that we discussed are below and you can follow Patrick or Adam on Twitter if that's your thing. Show notes Ransomware incidents now make up majority of British government's crisis management COBRA meetings - The Record by Recorded Future DHS Secretary: Cyberattacks are the most significant threat to port infrastructure - The Record by Recorded Future Michigan school districts reopen after three-day closure due to ransomware attack - The Record by Recorded Future Microsoft: Royal ransomware group using Google Ads in campaign - The Record by Recorded Future Researchers Quietly Cracked Zeppelin Ransomware Keys – Krebs on Security Risky Biz News: Cyber Partisans hack and disrupt Kremlin censor US, Estonian authorities arrest two over $575 million cryptocurrency fraud - The Record by Recorded Future New FTX CEO details 'complete failure of corporate controls' at crypto platform OpenSSL Usage in UEFI Firmware Exposes Weakness in SBOMs EU reaches agreement on new satellite constellation - The Record by Recorded Future Ukraine's Engineers Dodged Russian Mines To Get Kherson Back Online–With A Little Help From Elon Musk's Satellites Senate Democrats call on FTC to investigate Twitter's data security 11.17.22 - FTC - Twitter Letter Twitter has a lot of your data. Here's what you can do about it. Mastodon vulnerable to multiple system configuration problems | The Daily Swig System misconfiguration is the number one vulnerability, at least for Mastodon White House expected to issue executive order reining in spyware H20220930-005_Himes-Speier cc's - DocumentCloud A Leak Details Apple's Secret Dirt on Corellium, a Trusted Security Startup | WIRED Risky Biz News: Iranian state hackers breached US government agency and deployed a cryptominer, out of all things India removes ban on VLC media player after cybersecurity concerns addressed - The Record by Recorded Future Amazon addresses vulnerability affecting AWS AppSync - The Record by Recorded Future CVE-2022-41924 - RCE in Tailscale, DNS Rebinding, and You Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Affiliated Cyber Actors Exploiting Vulnerabilities for Data Extortion and Disk Encryption for Ransom Operations | CISA Impacket and Exfiltration Tool Used to Steal Sensitive Information from Defense Industrial Base Organization | CISA
On this week's show Patrick Gray and Adam Boileau discuss the week's security news, including: Half of all UK COBRA meetings are ransomware related Ransomware biggest risk to US port security White House to move on spyware industry EU to launch its own Starlink equivalent Much, much more AttackIQ's Jonathan Reiber will be joining us in this week's sponsor interview to talk about how companies and their boards are really moving towards outcomes-based security programs. Links to everything that we discussed are below and you can follow Patrick or Adam on Twitter if that's your thing. Show notes Ransomware incidents now make up majority of British government's crisis management COBRA meetings - The Record by Recorded Future DHS Secretary: Cyberattacks are the most significant threat to port infrastructure - The Record by Recorded Future Michigan school districts reopen after three-day closure due to ransomware attack - The Record by Recorded Future Microsoft: Royal ransomware group using Google Ads in campaign - The Record by Recorded Future Researchers Quietly Cracked Zeppelin Ransomware Keys – Krebs on Security Risky Biz News: Cyber Partisans hack and disrupt Kremlin censor US, Estonian authorities arrest two over $575 million cryptocurrency fraud - The Record by Recorded Future New FTX CEO details 'complete failure of corporate controls' at crypto platform OpenSSL Usage in UEFI Firmware Exposes Weakness in SBOMs EU reaches agreement on new satellite constellation - The Record by Recorded Future Ukraine's Engineers Dodged Russian Mines To Get Kherson Back Online–With A Little Help From Elon Musk's Satellites Senate Democrats call on FTC to investigate Twitter's data security 11.17.22 - FTC - Twitter Letter Twitter has a lot of your data. Here's what you can do about it. Mastodon vulnerable to multiple system configuration problems | The Daily Swig System misconfiguration is the number one vulnerability, at least for Mastodon White House expected to issue executive order reining in spyware H20220930-005_Himes-Speier cc's - DocumentCloud A Leak Details Apple's Secret Dirt on Corellium, a Trusted Security Startup | WIRED Risky Biz News: Iranian state hackers breached US government agency and deployed a cryptominer, out of all things India removes ban on VLC media player after cybersecurity concerns addressed - The Record by Recorded Future Amazon addresses vulnerability affecting AWS AppSync - The Record by Recorded Future CVE-2022-41924 - RCE in Tailscale, DNS Rebinding, and You Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Affiliated Cyber Actors Exploiting Vulnerabilities for Data Extortion and Disk Encryption for Ransom Operations | CISA Impacket and Exfiltration Tool Used to Steal Sensitive Information from Defense Industrial Base Organization | CISA
Dan is joined by Bill Neifert, Senior Vice President of Partnerships at Corellium. Prior to Corellium, Bill was Senior Director of Marketing for Arm's Development Solutions Group. Before that he was the co-founder and CTO of Carbon Design Systems which was acquired by Arm. Dan explores the virtualization technology of Correlium… Read More
Amanda Gorton is the CEO and Co-founder of Corellium, a platform that helps developer and security teams build, test, and secure mobile and IoT apps supporting iOS, Android, and Linux through ARM virtualization. Amanda was previously the Co-founder of Virtual, which Citrix acquired in 2014. She holds a master's degree in Latin from Yale. In this episode… When testing new software and devices, it's necessary to provide your development team with the resources needed to conduct effective tests — but many companies rely on physical devices that get lost, broken, or compromise their employees' personal security. So what is the most productive method to run QA and security tests? Virtualization services allow you to conduct software and device testing by creating replicas in component-based applications. This system enables you to run multiple softwares simultaneously, ensuring maximum efficiency. And with Corellium's ARM-based virtualization, you can protect your company's privacy by destroying virtual devices and seamlessly performing security tests during the initial stages of development. In today's episode of She Said Privacy/He Said Security, Jodi and Justin Daniels sit down with Amanda Gorton, Co-founder and CEO of Corellium, to discuss using virtualization services to perform safe and effective software testing. Amanda talks about how Corellium employs virtualization for developers to test software, the privacy and security guidelines companies should consider when working with virtualization, and the steps companies are taking to solve the most pressing privacy and security challenges.
When it comes to design and branding your business or making the perfect logo, where do you start? Brendan Hill had a one-on-one with Hayden Bleasel at the time he was the director and lead product designer at Jellypepper. Since then, he has advanced on to becoming the chief design officer of Corellium, where he leads the product and design teams. What you will learn in this episode:How Hayden started his agency in the branding spaceHow to work with big brands in the branding fieldThe blueprint of helping a client with product designThe best way to get your first iteration of logo and brandingThe meaning of a “minimum beautiful product”The deep meaning behind a logoThe process behind rebranding a businessHow to implement creative problem solving Resources mentioned:CorelliumJellypepperSpaceshipBlackbirdAirtreeGrokBrighte99 designsFiverrBarajaUenoMetaLabOtterClear MotionXeroTobias van Schneider Design tools:DovetailIllustratorFramerSketchFigmaAdobe XDNotion What business would you build on Mars?I'm tempted to say Instagram just because I think it would be really funny to see a thousand filtered pictures of red dirt everyday - everyone just commenting on each other's red dirt. I would probably do an interplanetary telco. That would be really fun. The first thing you'd want to do when you land on Mars is to check in back home, see how everything is going and the branding of that would be so easy. Tug at the heartstrings. Reach Hayden Bleasel here:on Linkedinon Twitteron his website
Your fledgling startup has just been sued by one of the most powerful companies in the world. How do you defend yourself?And keep your company afloat?This was the challenge faced by Amanda Gorton, CEO of Corellium, a company whose virtualization platform enables efficient mobile security research and quality testing across a massive variety of devices. Sued by Apple for both copyright infringement and violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), Amanda was thrust into an exhausting balancing act of defending and running her young business at the same time. In this episode of Security Voices, she shares the details of how she survived and successfully defended her company.Dave and Amanda go beyond the lawsuit and into the tricky territory of companies like Corellium who provide a service whose sales process must be governed by a clear sense of ethics to avoid it falling into the wrong hands. She shares the real world challenges of developing and applying such a policy in a company and while it may be uncomfortable to trust a small company with such a weighty responsibility, they just might be the very best option we have.We explore the complicated nature of DMCA in a world that has changed dramatically since its anti-Napster driven inception back in the late 90s. From the NSA's release of Ghidra to Web3, we muse on the future of the DMCA whose relevance feels to be slipping into the history books.BioAmanda Gorton is co-founder and CEO of Corellium, which provides an Arm-native cloud platform that virtualizes mobile and IoT devices across iOS, Android, and Linux. Corellium enables never-before-possible security research, development, and quality testing of apps, firmware, and hardware on Arm. Previously, Gorton co-founded and was the CEO of security startup Virtual, which was acquired by Citrix in 2014. She earned a degree in classics from Yale University.
In the Enterprise Security News for this week, ZeroFox has a $1.4 billion dollar blank check, Corellium raises a $25m series A, GreyNoise makes its data free to help out Log4j sufferers, AWS suffers its third outage in a month (coincidentally hindering GreyNoise's efforts), Ditching Unicorns for Dragons, Yet another easy way to become domain admin, thanks Microsoft, New report finds that current phishing training isn't effective and is even potentially harmful, & more! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw255
This week, Dr. David Brumley from ForAllSecure is with us to discuss Bringing Autonomy to Appsec Then, in the enterprise security news, ZeroFox has a $1.4 billion dollar blank check, Corellium raises a $25m series A, GreyNoise makes its data free to help out Log4j sufferers, AWS suffers its third outage in a month (coincidentally hindering GreyNoise's efforts), Ditching Unicorns for Dragons, Yet another easy way to become domain admin, thanks Microsoft, New report finds that current phishing training isn't effective and is even potentially harmful. Finally, we'll take a look at some of the biggest stories and interviews we discussed this year on ESW and will wrap with our thoughts and hopes for 2022. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw255 Segment Resources: Article on competition: https://www.darpa.mil/about-us/timeline/cyber-grand-challenge Technical article on approach: https://spectrum.ieee.org/mayhem-the-machine-that-finds-software-vulnerabilities-then-patches-them Example vulns discovered: https://forallsecure.com/blog/forallsecure-uncovers-critical-vulnerabilities-in-das-u-boot https://github.com/forallsecure/vulnerabilitieslab Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
This week, Dr. David Brumley from ForAllSecure is with us to discuss Bringing Autonomy to Appsec Then, in the enterprise security news, ZeroFox has a $1.4 billion dollar blank check, Corellium raises a $25m series A, GreyNoise makes its data free to help out Log4j sufferers, AWS suffers its third outage in a month (coincidentally hindering GreyNoise's efforts), Ditching Unicorns for Dragons, Yet another easy way to become domain admin, thanks Microsoft, New report finds that current phishing training isn't effective and is even potentially harmful. Finally, we'll take a look at some of the biggest stories and interviews we discussed this year on ESW and will wrap with our thoughts and hopes for 2022. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw255 Segment Resources: Article on competition: https://www.darpa.mil/about-us/timeline/cyber-grand-challenge Technical article on approach: https://spectrum.ieee.org/mayhem-the-machine-that-finds-software-vulnerabilities-then-patches-them Example vulns discovered: https://forallsecure.com/blog/forallsecure-uncovers-critical-vulnerabilities-in-das-u-boot https://github.com/forallsecure/vulnerabilitieslab Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
In the Enterprise Security News for this week, ZeroFox has a $1.4 billion dollar blank check, Corellium raises a $25m series A, GreyNoise makes its data free to help out Log4j sufferers, AWS suffers its third outage in a month (coincidentally hindering GreyNoise's efforts), Ditching Unicorns for Dragons, Yet another easy way to become domain admin, thanks Microsoft, New report finds that current phishing training isn't effective and is even potentially harmful, & more! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw255
Corellium co-founder and chief executive Amanda Gorton joins the show to talk about raising $25 million in Series A funding, the market fit for device modeling and software virtualization products, the trials and tribulations of startup life, and the nuances of operating in the world of offensive security research.
Ylämuistialan kartanolla vieraili teollisuusautomaation tietoturvakonkari Jari Seppälä. Modernit yhteiskunnat toimivat tietokoneiden ohjaamien tehtaiden ja laitosten varassa ja Jarilla on niiden tietoturvasta vuosien kokemus. Keskustelimme automaatioympäristöjen suojaamisesta, tunnetuimmista hyökkäyksistä automaatioympäristöjä kohtaan ja kysyimme Jarilta mikä hänen mielestään on automaatioympäristöjen tietoturvan taso tällä hetkellä Suomessa. Vieras: Jari Seppälä https://www.linkedin.com/in/jari-sepp%C3%A4l%C3%A4-29a1886/ Didi Global vastaan Kiinan Kansantasavalta https://www.reuters.com/world/china/china-asks-didi-delist-us-security-fears-bloomberg-news-2021-11-26/ Apple sues NSO Group to curb the abuse of state-sponsored spyware https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2021/11/apple-sues-nso-group-to-curb-the-abuse-of-state-sponsored-spyware/ Apple Details How It Will Warn Victims Of State-Sponsored Attacks https://www.forbes.com/sites/emmawoollacott/2021/11/25/apple-details-how-it-will-warn-victims-of-state-sponsored-attacks/?sh=3606c9d23950 Apple vs. Corellium https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2020/12/29/apple-corellium-lawsuit/ Security researcher Stefan Esser releases iPhone & iPad jailbreak detection tool in iOS App Store https://9to5mac.com/2016/05/10/security-research-stefan-esser-releases-iphone-ipad-jailbreak-detection-tool-in-ios-app-store/ Israel restricts cyberweapons export list by two-thirds, from 102 to 37 countries https://therecord.media/israel-restricts-cyberweapons-export-list-by-two-thirds-from-102-to-37-countries/ Raportti - Surveillance Technology at the Fair: Proliferation of Cyber Capabilities in International Arms Markets https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/in-depth-research-reports/issue-brief/surveillance-technology-at-the-fair/ DeepL Translator -käännöspalvelu https://www.deepl.com/translator https://www.deepl.com/translator#fi/en/Herrasmies%20hakkerit%20ovat%20vaikuttuneita%20uuden%20teko%C3%A4ly%C3%A4%20k%C3%A4ytt%C3%A4v%C3%A4n%20k%C3%A4%C3%A4nn%C3%B6skoneen%20sujuvasta%20toiminnasta.%20%0A Kirja: Automaation tietoturva – Kriittisen tuotannon turvaaminen https://www.automaatioseura.fi/julkaisut-kirjakauppa/automaation-tietoturva-julkaisut/ Mobile Phone Museum https://www.mobilephonemuseum.com/ FSMCs https://fsmcs.com/ Poets of the Fall https://poetsofthefall.com/ Captain - Space Debris [SpaceSynth Remix] https://youtu.be/n04s64IYI_M
Amanda Gorton, CEO and cofounder of Corellium, joins Dennis Fisher to discuss her path from studying classics to found two security startups, the challenges of building a unique platform, and the opportunity to help address IoT security.
Major performance milestones are being hit with new code inbound for Linux, Plasma and GNOME desktops are set to run Wayland on NVIDIA's binary driver, and why the SFC's new GPL fight could have implications for you.
Major performance milestones are being hit with new code inbound for Linux, Plasma and GNOME desktops are set to run Wayland on NVIDIA's binary driver, and why the SFC's new GPL fight could have implications for you.
Major performance milestones are being hit with new code inbound for Linux, Plasma and GNOME desktops are set to run Wayland on NVIDIA's binary driver, and why the SFC's new GPL fight could have implications for you.
On this week's show Patrick Gray and Adam Boileau discuss recent security news, including: T-Mobile owned hard USA no fly list winds up on unsecured ElasticSearch in Bahrain… because reasons Facebook scrambles to secure Afghani accounts Hacker steals and returns $600 from de-fi platform Healthcare sector struggles with ransomware attacks A very sweet TCP-based amplification technique that will be A Problem Much, much more Evan Sultanik and Dan Guido will be joining us to talk about Fickling – a tool developed by Trail of Bits to do unnatural things to the Python Pickle files that are heavily used as a means to share machine learning models. The machine learning supply chain is really quite wobbly, and they'll be joining us later to talk about that. Links to everything that we discussed are below and you can follow Patrick or Adam on Twitter if that's your thing. Show notes T-Mobile breach climbs to over 50 million people T-Mobile: Breach Exposed SSN/DOB of 40M+ People – Krebs on Security 1.9 million records from the FBI's terrorist watchlist leaked online - The Record by Recorded Future Facebook, other platforms scramble to secure user accounts in Afghanistan This $600 Million Crypto Heist Is the Most Bizarre Hack in Recent Memory A Hacker Stole and Then Returned $600 Million Japanese crypto-exchange Liquid hacked for $94 million - The Record by Recorded Future Operator of the Helix bitcoin mixer pleads guilty to money laundering - The Record by Recorded Future Healthcare provider expected to lose $106.8 million following ransomware attack - The Record by Recorded Future Hospitals hamstrung by ransomware are turning away patients | Ars Technica US healthcare org sends data breach warning to 1.4m patients following ransomware attack | The Daily Swig The pandemic revealed the health risks of hospital ransomware attacks - The Verge Ransomware hackers could hit U.S. supply chain, experts warn Ransomware hits Lojas Renner, Brazil's largest clothing store chain - The Record by Recorded Future RansomClave project uses Intel SGX enclaves for ransomware attacks - The Record by Recorded Future Wanted: Disgruntled Employees to Deploy Ransomware – Krebs on Security Japan's Tokio Marine is the latest insurer to be victimized by ransomware Cyber insurance market encounters ‘crisis moment' as ransomware costs pile up White House to tackle cyber challenges with Apple, IBM, insurance CEOs | Reuters FBI sends its first-ever alert about a 'ransomware affiliate' - The Record by Recorded Future New LockFile ransomware gang weaponizes ProxyShell and PetitPotam attacks - The Record by Recorded Future Multiple ransomware gangs pounce on 'PrintNightmare' vulnerability Peterborough NH Cyberattack: Town Loses $2.3M in Taxpayer Money – NBC Boston Almost 2,000 Exchange servers hacked using ProxyShell exploit - The Record by Recorded Future ALTDOS hacking group wreaks havoc across Southeast Asia - The Record by Recorded Future Hackers Leak Surveillance Camera Videos Purportedly Taken From Inside Iran's Evin Prison - by Kim Zetter - Zero Day Apple reopens legal fight against security firm Corellium, raising concerns for ethical hackers Apple says researchers can vet its child safety features. But it's suing a startup that does just that. | MIT Technology Review This $500 Million Russian Cyber Mogul Planned To Take His Company Public—Then America Accused It Of Hacking For Putin's Spies Cisco: Security devices are vulnerable to SNIcat data exfiltration technique - The Record by Recorded Future SNIcat: Circumventing the guardians | mnemonic BlackBerry's popular operating system for medical devices affected by critical vulnerabilities, drawing fed warnings Realtek SDK vulnerabilities impact dozens of downstream IoT vendors | The Daily Swig Hundreds of thousands of Realtek-based devices under attack from IoT botnet - The Record by Recorded Future Accellion Kiteworks Vulnerabilities | Insomnia Security Firewalls and middleboxes can be weaponized for gigantic DDoS attacks - The Record by Recorded Future Hackers tried to exploit two zero-days in Trend Micro's Apex One EDR platform - The Record by Recorded Future Exhaustive study puts China's infamous Great Firewall under the microscope | The Daily Swig Web hosting platform cPanel & WHM is vulnerable to authenticated RCE and privilege escalation | The Daily Swig Benno on Twitter: "I will donate $50 to a charity of @riskybusiness' choice if he puts this in the show." / Twitter Never a dill moment: Exploiting machine learning pickle files PrivacyRaven: Implementing a proof of concept for model inversion GitHub - trailofbits/fickling: A Python pickling decompiler and static analyzer
https://www.instagram.com/0dan_1e/ 00:00 - Giriş 00:10 - Apple csam 01:55 - Apple Corellium 02:20 - Open App Markets Act 03:48 - Intel Arc 04:55 - Github Codespace 05:11 - Tiktok değişiklik 05:29 - Polynetwork 06:48 - Onlyfans 07:46 - Imperial Kitten 09:01 - Hızlı Haberler 10:10 - Çıkış #Apple, #csam, #Corellium, #Open App Markets Act, #appstore, #playstore, #Intel, #ARC, #Xe, #XeSS, #Github, #Codespace, #Tiktok, #Polynetwork, #Onlyfans, #Imperial kitten, #Türk Telekom, #Amd, #Epyc, #T-mobile, #Çin, #wechat, #norton, #avast, #vivo, #reddit, #twitter, #facebook, #gigabyte, #epicgames, #ücretsiz oyun
This week we covered: News Now Microsoft is protesting after Amazon won a $10 billion NSA cloud contract Bezos sues Nasa over its deal with Elon Musk's SpaceX Avast, ye takeover lawyers! Norton LifeLock to acquire security rival Apple drops copyright lawsuit against Corellium for selling virtual iOS devices Wait a darn moment… Apple backs out of settlement and files appeal notice in a lawsuit against Corellium Hackers Steal Over $600 Million Worth of Cryptocurrencies from Poly NetworkThen give $260m back…. and then gets a job at the company?!! IT Giant Accenture Hit by LockBit Ransomware; Hackers Threaten to Leak Data Intel Video Cards Get a Brand Name: Arc, Coming in Q1 2022 Rumours: Redesigned MacBook Air Coming With Multiple Colours, Launching 2022 Rumoured Intel laptop chip could deliver desktop graphics card frame rates As always, we'd love to hear your comments Find us on Twitter @WeeklyTechRant
In Folge 69 sprechen die ApfelNerds über die laufende CSAM-Filter-Diskussion. Unter anderem über Craig Federighis Interview, eine Apple-interne Diskussion, die Aufforderung des Deutschen Journalisten Verbands (DJV) und des Deutschen Bundestags, Sicherheitsforscher finden Apples „NeurolHash“-Code, und 90 Organisationen rufen Apple dazu auf eine „Kehrtwende“ bei CSAM zu vollziehen. Außerdem geht es um eine neue Gesetzesvorlage in den USA zum öffnen von Zahlungssystem und Distributionsmethoden im AppStore, Apple legt Berufung im Fall Apple gegen Corellium ein, Podcaster beschweren sich über Apples Podcasts, Mitarbeiter verlassen verstärkt Apple, die gerüchtete Apple TV-Fernbedienung von Universal Electronic ist aufgetaucht, Daniel hat „Mail-Aktivität schützen“ wieder abgeschaltet, die MiniLEDs sollen „Haupt-Treiber“ für MacBook-Absatz werden, erste Gerüchte zum September-Termin, die Apple Watch 7 soll „iPhone 12“-Designsprache erhalten, LG investiert 2,81 Milliarden Dollar in OLED-Fabrik, das neues iPad und neues iPad mini sollen noch 2021 erscheinen, die Betas 6 sind da, nur Monterey noch nicht, die neue Siri Remote bekommt ihr erstes Firmware-Update, Apple-Pay verantwortlich für 92 % aller Wallet-basierten Transaktionen in den USA in 2020, Tweetbot 6.2 bringt Timeline-Widgets, Multi-Window-Support, Netflix rollt Spatial Audio-Support in iPhone-/iPad-App und Konami belebt Castlevania wieder.
Patrocínio: Alphacode Ganhe 10% de desconto para fazer seu aplicativo Android ou iOS com a Alphacode! Acesse https://www.alphacode.com.br. -------------------------------- Sobre o Podcast O Loop Matinal é um podcast do Loop Infinito que traz as notícias mais importantes do mundo da tecnologia para quem não tem tempo de ler sites e blogs de tecnologia. Marcus Mendes apresenta um resumo rápido e conciso das notícias mais importantes, sempre com bom-humor e um toque de acidez. Confira as notícias das últimas 24h, e até amanhã! -------------------------------- Apoie o Loop Matinal! O Loop Matinal está no apoia.se/loopmatinal e no picpay.me/loopmatinal! Se você quiser ajudar a manter o podcast no ar, é só escolher a categoria que você preferir e definir seu apoio mensal. Obrigado em especial aos ouvintes Advogado Junio Araujo, Alexsandra Romio, Alisson Rocha, Anderson Barbosa, Anderson Cazarotti, Angelo Almiento, Arthur Givigir, Breno Farber, Caio Santos, Carolina Vieira, Christophe Trevisani, Claudio Souza, Dan Fujita, Daniel Ivasse, Daniel Cardoso, Diogo Silva, Edgard Contente, Edson Pieczarka Jr, Fabian Umpierre, Fabio Brasileiro, Felipe, Francisco Neto, Frederico Souza, Gabriel Souza, Guilherme Santos, Henrique Orçati, Horacio Monteiro, Igor Antonio, Igor Silva, Ismael Cunha, Jeadilson Bezerra, Jorge Fleming, Jose Junior, Juliana Majikina, Juliano Cezar, Juliano Marcon, Leandro Bodo, Luis Carvalho, Luiz Mota, Marcus Coufal, Mauricio Junior, Messias Oliveira, Nilton Vivacqua, Otavio Tognolo, Paulo Sousa, Ricardo Mello, Ricardo Berjeaut, Ricardo Soares, Rickybell, Roberto Chiaratti, Rodrigo Rosa, Rodrigo Rezende, Samir da Converta Mais, Teresa Borges, Tiago Soares, Victor Souza, Vinícius Lima, Vinícius Ghise e Wilson Pimentel pelo apoio! -------------------------------- CES 2022 exigirá comprovação de vacina: https://www.b9.com.br/149181/participantes-ces-2022-apresentar-comprovante-vacinacao/ Among Us protesta contra cópia no Fortnite: https://www.theverge.com/2021/8/18/22630365/among-us-fornite-impostors-mode-clone-reaction Google terá atitudes de transparência nas eleições no Brasil: https://tecnoblog.net/481033/google-tera-relatorio-de-transparencia-para-anunciantes-nas-eleicoes-2022/ Xiaomi terá mais lojas no Brasil: https://tecnoblog.net/480851/xiaomi-anuncia-cinco-novas-lojas-em-sao-paulo-rio-salvador-e-curitiba/ Xiaomi anuncia o Redmi 10: https://tecnoblog.net/480362/xiaomi-redmi-10-e-lancado-com-camera-quadrupla-de-50-mp-e-bateria-grande/ Samsung anuncia o Galaxy A03s: https://tecnoblog.net/481232/samsung-lanca-galaxy-a03s-com-bateria-de-5-000-mah-e-preco-baixo/ Samsung anuncia o Galaxy A52s 5G: https://tecnoblog.net/480997/samsung-anuncia-galaxy-a52s-5g-com-tela-de-120-hz-e-snapdragon-778g/ Samsung vai parar de exibir anúncios em apps: https://www.theverge.com/2021/8/18/22630332/samsung-ads-default-stock-apps-weather-pay-theme-confirmed?scrolla=5eb6d68b7fedc32c19ef33b4 Google lança o Pixel 5a: https://9to5mac.com/2021/08/17/google-launches-iphone-se-competitor-with-5g/ Google Pixel 6 não terá carregador na caixa: https://9to5google.com/2021/08/17/pixel-6-charger/ Intel desiste da RealSense: https://www.crn.com/news/components-peripherals/intel-says-it-s-shuttering-realsense-camera-business Twitter testa novo sistema para reportar mentiras: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-08-17/twitter-will-let-users-report-misinformation-for-first-time YouTube exibirá capítulos nos resultados de busca: https://techcrunch.com/2021/08/17/youtube-upgrades-search-with-chapter-previews-and-better-recommendations-for-translated-videos/ Loop Infinito: Loopcast 307: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9SS33uOwM6Q Apple volta a processar a Corellium: https://9to5mac.com/2021/08/17/apple-backs-out-of-settlement-and-files-appeal-notice-in-lawsuit-against-corellium/ Apple Pay é liberado em cartões Porto Seguro Mastercard: https://blogdoiphone.com/apple-pay/porto-seguro-mastercard/ Apple lança os Beats Studio Buds no Brasil: https://macmagazine.com.br/post/2021/08/17/apple-comeca-a-vender-os-beats-studio-buds-no-brasil/ -------------------------------- Site do Loop Matinal: http://www.loopmatinal.com Anuncie no Loop Matinal: comercial@loopinfinito.net Marcus Mendes: https://www.twitter.com/mvcmendes Loop Infinito: https://www.youtube.com/oloopinfinito
iPhone 13' launch due third week of September, says analyst; Purported 'Apple Watch Series 7' renders show larger speakers, iPhone 12-style straight edges; Apple to pursue copyright claims against Corellium in appellate court
All hands on deck for a ship announcement, cadets, so break out your dress uniforms. Admiral William Gallagher is back, we lead with the story nobody ever wants to hear, and we've also got the usual news and views. Don't miss this one, cadets. https://everloved.com/life-of/marissa-wuerthele/ https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/13/apple-details-user-privacy-security-features-built-into-its-csam-scanning-system https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/13/apples-federighi-says-child-protection-message-was-jumbled-misunderstood https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/10/apple-privacy-head-explains-privacy-protections-of-csam-detection-system https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/11/apple-settles-lawsuit-against-virtualization-firm-corellium https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/11/senate-lawmakers-introduce-bill-targeting-apple-app-store-google-play https://glass.photo https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/13/spain-integrates-apple-wallet-support-for-eu-digital-covid-certificate https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/10/parallels-desktop-17-brings-windows-11-to-mac-with-enhanced-m1-support https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/12/apple-tv-original-sci-fi-film-finch-starring-tom-hanks-debuts-on-nov-5 https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/13/sundance-hit-coda-now-streaming-on-apple-tv https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/09/vince-vaughn-detective-drama-bad-monkey-ordered-for-apple-tv https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/12/disney-reaches-116m-subscribers-in-less-than-two-years https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/10/japanese-apple-pay-users-can-add-waon-and-nanaco-felica-cards-later-in-2021 https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/10/movie-theater-giant-amc-to-accept-apple-pay-by-2022 https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/10/code-in-ios-15-details-airpods-pro-max-integration-with-apples-find-my-network https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/10/free-airpods-offer-incentivizes-youth-vaccinations-in-washington-dc https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/10/apple-adds-webm-web-audio-support-to-safari-in-latest-ios-15-beta https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/13/apple-backed-matter-smart-home-standard-delayed-until-2022 https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/12/billie-eilish-and-apple-music-team-up-on-spatial-audio-short-film https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/11/samsung-galaxy-z-fold3-5g-and-galaxy-z-flip3-5g-announced-at-galaxy-unpacked https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/13/eu-to-propose-common-charger-for-all-smartphones-ignores-apples-protest https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/11/facebook-pivoting-toward-privacy-enhancing-technology-for-targeted-ads https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/12/samsungs-new-galaxy-watch-4-models-are-not-ios-compatible https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/11/whatsapp-to-enable-chat-history-transfers-between-ios-and-android https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/09/arlo-fixes-bug-that-prevented-users-from-adding-devices-to-apple-homekit https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/10/two-airtags-used-by-security-expert-to-track-down-stolen-e-scooter https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/10/simplified-google-titan-security-key-lineup-shipping-august-10 https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/08/12/apple-researchers-use-airpods-to-estimate-user-respiratory-rates
This week on Happy Hour, Benjamin and Zac follow up on the iCloud Child Safety backlash and look forward to the iPhone 13 with new reports from Bloomberg about expected new video and photo features. Plus, a wacky way to reset AirPods in iOS 15 and the state of Apple's presence in the home. Sponsored by MacUpdater: Keep all your software up-to-date effortlessly. Download MacUpdater at corecode.io/happyhour. Get 10% off by using HAPPYHOURQ3 at checkout. Sponsored by ExpressVPN: Take back your Internet privacy today and get 3 months free with a 1-year package at ExpressVPN.com/HappyHour. Sponsored by BetterHelp: As a listener, you'll get 10% off your first month by visiting our sponsor at BetterHelp.com/MacHappyHour. Follow Zac Hall @apollozac Benjamin Mayo @bzamayo Subscribe Apple Podcasts Overcast Spotify Read More Apple SVP Craig Federighi responds to confusion over iOS 15 iCloud child safety policies in new interview Opinion: The Apple CSAM scanning controversy was entirely predictable Apple employees express concerns about new CSAM scanning Apple releases latest macOS Monterey public beta Foxconn hints at iPhone 13 component shortages; new camera assembly process iOS 15 to link AirPods with your Apple ID as part of Find My Network Misusing CSAM scanning in US prevented by Fourth Amendment, argues Corellium Report: iPhone 13 Pro models to add Portrait video mode, ProRes recording, other camera improvements Listen to more 9to5 Podcasts Stacktrace Apple @ Work Alphabet Scoop Electrek The Buzz Podcast Space Explored Rapid Unscheduled Discussions Enjoy the podcast? Shop Apple at Amazon to support 9to5Mac Happy Hour!
Patrocínio: Alphacode Ganhe 10% de desconto para fazer seu aplicativo Android ou iOS com a Alphacode! Acesse https://www.alphacode.com.br. -------------------------------- Sobre o Podcast O Loop Matinal é um podcast do Loop Infinito que traz as notícias mais importantes do mundo da tecnologia para quem não tem tempo de ler sites e blogs de tecnologia. Marcus Mendes apresenta um resumo rápido e conciso das notícias mais importantes, sempre com bom-humor e um toque de acidez. Confira as notícias das últimas 24h, e até amanhã! -------------------------------- Apoie o Loop Matinal! O Loop Matinal está no apoia.se/loopmatinal e no picpay.me/loopmatinal! Se você quiser ajudar a manter o podcast no ar, é só escolher a categoria que você preferir e definir seu apoio mensal. Obrigado em especial aos ouvintes Advogado Junio Araujo, Alexsandra Romio, Alisson Rocha, Anderson Barbosa, Anderson Cazarotti, Angelo Almiento, Arthur Givigir, Breno Farber, Caio Santos, Carolina Vieira, Christophe Trevisani, Claudio Souza, Dan Fujita, Daniel Ivasse, Daniel Cardoso, Diogo Silva, Edgard Contente, Edson Pieczarka Jr, Fabian Umpierre, Fabio Brasileiro, Felipe, Francisco Neto, Frederico Souza, Gabriel Souza, Guilherme Santos, Henrique Orçati, Horacio Monteiro, Igor Antonio, Igor Silva, Ismael Cunha, Jeadilson Bezerra, Jorge Fleming, Jose Junior, Juliana Majikina, Juliano Cezar, Juliano Marcon, Leandro Bodo, Luis Carvalho, Luiz Mota, Marcus Coufal, Mauricio Junior, Messias Oliveira, Nilton Vivacqua, Otavio Tognolo, Paulo Sousa, Ricardo Mello, Ricardo Berjeaut, Ricardo Soares, Rickybell, Roberto Chiaratti, Rodrigo Rosa, Rodrigo Rezende, Samir da Converta Mais, Teresa Borges, Tiago Soares, Victor Souza, Vinícius Lima, Vinícius Ghise e Wilson Pimentel pelo apoio! -------------------------------- Twitch detalhará motivo de banimento: https://tecnoblog.net/477675/twitch-passa-a-dar-mais-detalhes-sobre-punicoes-a-streamers-banidos/ Fortnite terá Superman: https://www.epicgames.com/fortnite/pt-BR/news/dcs-superman-flies-into-fortnite-unlock-clark-kent-superman-and-more-with-special-quests PIX bate recorde de transferências: https://www.poder360.com.br/economia/pix-bate-recorde-de-transferencias-as-vesperas-do-dia-dos-pais/ YouTuber brasileiro foi pago para semear dúvidas sobre vacinas: https://tecnoblog.net/478344/facebook-remove-russos-que-pagaram-youtuber-do-brasil-por-videos-antivacina/ Facebook remove contas que semeavam dúvidas sobre vacinação: https://www.reuters.com/technology/facebook-removes-russian-network-that-targeted-influencers-peddle-anti-vax-2021-08-10/ Instagram aumenta combate a abuso: https://9to5mac.com/2021/08/11/instagram-harassment-protection-improved/ Twitter publica relatório sobre racismo na final da Euro 2020: https://www.theverge.com/2021/8/10/22618500/twitter-analysis-racist-abuse-euro-2020-identification China seguirá controlando empresas de tecnologia até 2025: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-08-11/china-signals-regulatory-crackdown-will-deepen-in-long-push Samsung anuncia o Galaxy Z Fold 3: https://www.theverge.com/22617206/samsung-galaxy-z-fold-3-features-specs-price-hands-on Samsung anuncia o Galaxy Z Flip 3: https://www.theverge.com/22617226/samsung-galaxy-z-flip-3-features-price-foldable-hands-on Samsung anuncia o Galaxy Watch 4: https://www.theverge.com/22618532/galaxy-watch-4-classic-smartwatch-fitness-tracker-price-specs-features Samsung anuncia os Galaxy Buds 2: https://www.theverge.com/2021/8/11/22619796/samsung-galaxy-buds-2-features-price Novidades da Samsung no Loop Infinito: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7igR4i9IHM Apple desiste de processo contra a Corellium: https://9to5mac.com/2021/08/10/apple-drops-copyright-lawsuit-against-corellium-for-selling-virtual-ios-devices/ iOS 15 associará AirPods ao Apple ID: https://9to5mac.com/2021/08/10/ios-15-to-link-airpods-with-your-apple-id-as-part-of-find-my-network/ -------------------------------- Site do Loop Matinal: http://www.loopmatinal.com Anuncie no Loop Matinal: comercial@loopinfinito.net Marcus Mendes: https://www.twitter.com/mvcmendes Loop Infinito: https://www.youtube.com/oloopinfinito
0:00 Always be ready 0:08 Samsung Unpacked 2021 1:51 Poly Network crypto heist 2:52 RX 6600 XT, RTX A2000 3:42 Manscaped 4:14 QUICK BITS 4:25 GamersNexus exploding PSUs story 4:50 Xiaomi Cyberdog 5:17 Apple drops Corellium lawsuit 5:43 Amazon to pay injured customers 6:06 OpenAI Codex natural language programming
Senate lawmakers introduce bill targeting Apple App Store, Google Play;Apple drops lawsuit against virtualization firm Corellium; Apple releases Big Sur 11.5.2 update
It was quite a week in cybersecurity. The Israeli firm NSO Group was outed by a consortium of newspapers and media entities for its snooping software Pegasus, which seems to have gathered data from the phones of a shockingly large number of people. Then, starting Sunday evening and into Monday morning, the Biden administration announced a multi-lateral response to China's Microsoft Exchange Server hack. There were indictments, there was a toughly worded statement, but there were no sanctions. Was it enough? Benjamin Wittes sat down with Matt Tait, AKA @pwnallthethings, the chief operating officer of Corellium, and Dmitri Alperovitch, the founder of the Silverado Policy Accelerator and the co-founder of CrowdStrike. They talked about the Biden administration's response on China; the disclosure of Pegasus and what that means for iPhone security, for Apple and for the Israeli government; and they talked about mobile device security. Is it hopeless?Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/lawfare. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Probably best known as the Twitter handle @pwnallthethings, Matt Tait is the chief operating officer of Corellium. Previously, he was a hacker for GCHQ, the British version of the National Security Agency, he was the CEO of Capital Alpha Security, and he worked at Google Project Zero, among other things. Most of this podcast was recorded before the news of the Kaseya ransomware attack broke over the weekend (Matt wrote a piece on Lawfare entitled, "The Kaseya Ransomware Attack is a Really Big Deal"). They talked a bit about Kaseya at the beginning of the episode before turning to a more general discussion of ransomware, other current cybersecurity threats and what Matt is worried about as he looks into the future. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The A-Team assembled to make open source more trustworthy, why we might be about to find out how much SUSE is worth, and some essential project updates.
This week we covered: News Apple Extends Apple TV subscription again - Is there a subscriber conversion problem? Corellium makes its iOS virtualisation available to individuals - fancy some virtual iPhones? Looks like the Huawei Ban isn't going away anytime soon - No change in China relations Hackers publish Gov files after Ransom is refused - We do not negotiate with Terrorists/hackers Apple unveils new Fitness+“Time to Walk” activity - These boots were made for walking! Apple Watch saves kidnapped woman - A first! Alphabet is shutting down the Loon Internet service - someone popped that balloon! LG considers exiting smartphones in 2021 - is the market too crowded? Weeks later, Google still hasn't added privacy labels to its most popular iPhone apps Update on the story from last week Gadgets Jay has got his HomePod Minis! Games Hitman 3 first thoughts Hitman Dev's Bond Project could end up being a Trilogy Cyberpunk 2077 1.1 Patch - fix or bust? As always please let us know your thoughts in the comments!
Why we don't think Red Hat's expanded developer program is enough, our reaction to Ubuntu sticking with an older Gnome release, and a tiny delightful surprise.
Patrocinador: suscríbete a Quinto Nivel, el podcast de Sony España de PlayStation 5. Es muy divertido, entrenido y sobre todo vas a estar el día de todo, todito todo. IPFS en Brave / Linux en Apple Silicon / Los trucos de Google / SpaceX hace el papeleo en España y Latam / La curiosa unificación de Beeper Brave integra IPFS de forma nativa. El sistema de distribución de documentos distribuido permite compartir archivos entre nodos de forma p2p en la última versión 1.19. Solo en la versión de escritorio, pronto en Android. ¿Nunca en iPhone? Tu ordenador (a través de Brave) será un nodo para mantener una copia de diversos archivos que visites en IPFS. Por defecto puede ocupar hasta 1 GB de almacenamiento. Los archivos más populares se van replicando en otros nodos, pero los menos populares pueden desaparecer. Ya se puede instalar Linux en los Apple Silicon. La primera versión funcional la han conseguido los de Corellium, aunque de momento faltan muchas cosas importantes como aceleración gráfica por hardware. La instalación es muy sencilla. Tras unos rifirrafes internos, parece que habrá colaboración con Asahi Linux de Hector Martín, que podéis ver pelearse en directos en YouTube para conseguir que funcione. Google encuentra un truco para evitar las etiquetas de privacidad que Apple solicita de todas las aplicaciones desde el 8 de diciembre: no actualizar sus aplicaciones. Más allá del chiste, seguramente la recopilación sea tan compleja que deben tener a los expertos legales trabajando a destajo. IKEA lanzará sus paneles solares en España. El fabricante trabajará con los clientes para crear soluciones propias a cada caso, como las cocinas, que empezarán desde 4.170 euros incluyendo montaje y garantías. Beeper ofrece un plan curioso para unificar toda la mensajería. Una aplicación que permite tener casi todos los servicios de mensajería unificados en una única bandeja, con aplicaciones nativas para Windows, Mac y Linux, y que cuesta 10 dólares al mes o instalándolo tú mismo. Incluso iMessage, sí. Y lo hacen con un curioso hack: usan viejos iPhones reciclados como proxy. SpaceX arranca en España, Argentina, México, Colombia y Chile. De momento han establecido una labor comercial inicial firmando el papeleo inicial necesario, quedando a la espera de fechas y precios de instalación. Más revelaciones sobre el ataque de SolarWinds. Descubren otro malware que jugó un rol importante en la distribución, denominado ahora Raindrop por los expertos. Pasarán meses o años hasta que se sepa la magnitud real de este ataque.
Martin (@mrtn9), Vetle (@bordplate), Eirik (@0xSV1) og Tobias (@iface_tobu) snakker om warstories fra jobb, NSM om Solarwinds, Ticketmaster som hoster opp $10 millioner for hacking, Apple har ennå ikke "tapt" mot Corellium, enda mer bakdør i Zyxel, norsk podcastprofil starter eget sikkerhetsfirma og IT-SECPRO - sikkerhetsmåneden for deg som arbeider med IT-sikkerhet.
Episode 343 of the Cyberlaw Podcast is a long meditation on the ways in which technology is encouraging other nations to exercise soft power inside the United States. I interview Nina Jankowicz, author of How to Lose the Information War on how Russian disinformation has affected Poland, Ukraine and the rest of Eastern Europe—and the lessons, if any, those countries can offer a divided United States. In the news, Bruce Schneier and I dig for more lessons in the rubble left behind by the SolarWinds hack. Nobody comes out looking good. Persistent engagement and defending forward only works if you're actually, you know, engaged and defending, and Russia's cyberspies managed (not surprisingly) to have hidden their achievement from the National Security Agency (NSA) and Cyber Command. More and better defense is another answer (not that it's worked for the last 40 years it's been tried). But whatever solution we pursue, Bruce makes clear, it's going to be expensive. Taking a quick break from geopolitics, Michael Weiner gives us a rundown on the new charges and details (mostly redacted) in the Texas case against Google for monopolization and conspiring with competitor Facebook. The scariest thing about the case from Google's point of view, though, may be where it's been filed. Not Washington but Beaumont, Texas, the most notoriously pro-plaintiff, anti-corporate jurisdiction in the country. Returning to ways in which foreign governments are using our technology against us, David Kris tells the story of the Zoom executive who used pretextual violations of terms of service to take down speech the Chinese government didn't like, censoring American efforts to hold a Tiananmen memorial. The good news: He was indicted by the Justice Department. The bad news: I can't help suspecting that China learned this trick from lefty ideologues in Silicon Valley. Aaand, right on cue, it turns out that China's been accused of using its 50-cent army to file complaints of racism and video game violence to get YouTube to demonetize Americans using the platform to criticize China's government. Then Bruce points us toward a deep and troubling series of Zach Dorfman articles about how effectively China is using technology to vault over US intelligence agencies in the global spying competition. And in quick succession, David Kris explains what's new and what's not in Israel's view of international law and cyberconflict. I note that President Trump's NDAA veto has been overridden, making the cyberczar and DHS's CISA the biggest winners in the cyber policy arena. Bruce and I give a lick and a promise to the FinCen proposed rule regulating cryptocurrency. We're both inclined to think more reregulation is worth pursuing, but we agree it's too late for this administration to get anything on the books. David Kris notes that Twitter has been fined around $550,000 over a data breach filing that was a few days late – by the Irish data protection office, in a GDPR ruling that is a few years late. Apple has lost its bullying copyright battle against security start-up Corellium but the real risk to Corellium may be in the as-yet unresolved claim for violation of the DMCA. And Trump's DHS is leaving office with new warnings about the cyber risks of Chinese technology, this time touching on backdoors in TCL smart TVs and spillage from Chinese data services. And more. Download Episode 343 (mp3) You can subscribe to The Cyberlaw Podcast using iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, Pocket Casts, or our RSS feed. As always, The Cyberlaw Podcast is open to feedback. Be sure to engage with @stewartbaker on Twitter. Send your questions, comments, and suggestions for topics or interviewees to CyberlawPodcast@steptoe.com. Remember: If your suggested guest appears on the show, we will send you a highly coveted Cyberlaw Podcast mug! The views expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and do not reflect the opinions of their institutions, clients, friends, families, or pets.
Episode #19: On today's show, I'll be covering Amazon's big podcast acquisition, Binance suspending XRP trading & Apple losing a copyright battle against security start-up Corellium. *Subscribe to Coffey & Code to be notified when new episodes go live!* Want to support this podcast? Visit https://anchor.fm/coffeyandcode/support or leave a rate & review on Apple Podcasts. If you'd like to suggest a topic to be covered, or would like to give feedback on the show, I'd love to hear from you. Visit https://anchor.fm/coffeyandcode/message to drop me a line, or find me on twitter @ashleycoffey_ and instagram @ashleyrcoffey89. Thanks for listening! Special thank you to Just Good Coffee Company, the official coffee partner of Coffey & Code. Just Good Coffee offers a carefully crafted selection of coffee from some of the most revered coffee-producing regions around the world. Their commitment to offering exceptionally good experiences extends beyond just the products themselves, but extends well into the community. Their mission is simple, to offer good coffee, and coffee for good. From cup, to community. That is the sole purpose of Just Good Coffee. Be sure to checkout their newest Culture Collection. These blends are carefully crafted and roasted to perfection, each with origins from within the great continent of Africa. You can find them at justgoodcoffee.co --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/coffeyandcode/support
Welcome to TechCrunch daily news, a round up of the top tech news of the day. --Apple faces a major setback in one of its legal fights --VMware sues a former executive --and Google tests a new short-form video feature. This is your Daily Crunch. The big story is: Apple filed a lawsuit last year against Corellium, a company that allows security researchers to create virtualized iOS devices in the browser in order to discover potential security flaws.
Our interview is with Mara Hvistendahl, an investigative journalist at The Intercept and author of a new book, The Scientist and the Spy: A True Story of China, the FBI, and Industrial Espionage, as well as a deep WIRED article on the least known Chinese AI champion, iFlytek. Mara's book raises questions about the expense and motivations of the FBI's pursuit of commercial spying from China. In the News Roundup, Gus Hurwitz, Nick Weaver, and I wrestle with whether Apple's lawsuit against Corellium is really aimed at the FBI. The answer looks to be affirmative since an Apple victory would make it harder for contractors to find hackable flaws in the iPhone. Germany's top court ruled that German intelligence can no longer freely spy on foreigners – or share intelligence with other western countries. The court seems to be trying to leave the door open to something that looks like intelligence collection, but the hurdles are many. Which reminds me that I somehow missed the 100th anniversary of the Weimar Republic. There's Trouble Right Here in Takedown City. Gus lays out all the screwy and maybe even dangerous takedown decisions that came to light last week. YouTube censored epidemiologist Knut Wittkowski for opposing lockdown. It suspended and then reinstated a popular Android podcast app for the crime of cataloging COVID-19 content. We learned that anyone can engage in a self-help right to be forgotten with a bit of backdating and a plagiarism claim. Classical musicians are taking it on the chin in their battle with aggressive copyright enforcement bots and a sluggish Silicon Valley response. In that climate, who can blame the Supreme Court for ducking cases asking for a ruling on the scope of Section 230? They've dodged one already, and we predict the same outcome in the next one. Finally, Gus unpacks the recent report on the DMCA from the Copyright Lobbying Office – er, the Copyright Office. With relief, we turn to Matthew Heiman for more cyber and less law. It sure looks like Israel launched a disruptive cyberattack on Iranian port facility. It was probably a response to Iranian cybe-rmeddling with Israeli water systems. Nick covers Bizarro-world cybersecurity: It turns out malware authors now can hire their own black-market security pentesters. I ask about open-source security and am met with derisive laughter, which certainly seems fair after flaws were found in dozens of applications. I also cover new developments in AI. And the news from AI speech imitation is that Presidents Trump and Obama have fake-endorsed Lyrebird. Gus reminds us that most of privacy law is about unintended consequences, like telling Grandma she's violating GDPR by posting her grandchildren's photos without their parents' consent. Beerint at last makes its appearance, as it turns out that military and intelligence personnel can be tracked with a beer enthusiast app. Finally, in the wake of Joe Rogan's deal with Spotify, I offer assurances that the Cyberlaw Podcast is not going to sell out for $100 million. Download the 317th Episode (mp3). You can subscribe to The Cyberlaw Podcast using iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, Pocket Casts, or our RSS feed. As always, The Cyberlaw Podcast is open to feedback. Be sure to engage with @stewartbaker on Twitter. Send your questions, comments, and suggestions for topics or interviewees to CyberlawPodcast@steptoe.com. Remember: If your suggested guest appears on the show, we will send you a highly coveted Cyberlaw Podcast mug! The views expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and do not reflect the opinions of their institutions, clients, friends, families, or pets.
J.P. Morgan once responded to President Teddy Roosevelt's charge that he'd violated federal antitrust law by saying, “If we have done anything wrong, send your man to see my man, and we'll fix it up.” That used to be the gold standard for monopolist arrogance in dealing with government, but Google and Apple have put J.P. Morgan in the shade with their latest instruction to the governments of the world: You can't use our app to trace COVID-19 infections unless you promise not to use it for quarantine or law enforcement purposes. They are only able to do this because the two companies have more or less 99 percent of the phone OS market. That's more control than Morgan had of U.S. railways, and their dominance apparently allows them to say, “If you think we've done something wrong, don't bother to send your man; ours is too busy to meet.” Nate Jones and I discuss the question of Silicon Valley overreach in this episode. (In that vein, I apologize unreservedly to John D. Rockefeller, to whom I mistakenly attributed the quote.) The sad result is that a promising technological adjunct to contact tracing has been delayed and muddled by ideological engineers to the point where it isn't likely to be deployed and used in a timely way. Another lesson we draw in today's episode is for authoritarian governments: Worry less about Cyber Command and more about NGOs. Citizen Lab has released a great paper making the case that WeChat monitors its users outside China, not to suppress their speech but to flag documents and images for later suppression inside China. Ironically, Matthew Heiman notes, Western users of WeChat who circulate human rights material are giving China's censors the ability to hash and block that material as soon as it crosses the Great Firewall. Meanwhile, Nate points out, Bellingcat has done for Russia's GRU what Citizen Lab did for China. Perhaps inspired by Germany's indictment of Dmitry Badin for hacking the Bundestag, Bellingcat doxes him to a fare-thee-well, finding his phone number, car registration, GRU office address and preposterously bad password. David Kris explains the intersection of export control law and the Law of Unintended Consequences, as the U.S. Commerce Department finds that its efforts to isolate Huawei may be excluding U.S. firms from some standards bodies. Anthony Anscombe joins us from Steptoe's class action practice to unpack the recent Seventh Circuit decision on Article III standing and Illinois's Biometric Information Privacy Act. Israel's passive-aggressive Supreme Court, meanwhile, has found a second way to say, “Meh,” to the Israeli government's use of intelligence tools to do contact tracing. Matthew lays out what's at stake as the Senate tries again to pass its FISA bill. That may happen as early as today. In short hits, everybody's government hackers are adding COVID-19 to their targets, going after everyone from the WHO to coronavirus researchers. I make an effort to explain why Apple has brought a DMCA copyright lawsuit against Corellium. It's all about the “chilling effect” on security research. And maybe one particular Five Eyes researcher. I make the case for Justice Department intervention on Corellium's behalf—or at least Azimuth's. Banjo's CEO steps down. And where is Jean-Paul Sartre when you need him? He's the only one who can resolve the odd dispute over “authenticity” between Twitter and the U.S. State Department. You can subscribe to The Cyberlaw Podcast using iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, Pocket Casts, or our RSS feed. As always, The Cyberlaw Podcast is open to feedback. Be sure to engage with @stewartbaker on Twitter. Send your questions, comments, and suggestions for topics or interviewees to CyberlawPodcast@steptoe.com. Remember: If your suggested guest appears on the show, we will send you a highly coveted Cyberlaw Podcast mug! The views expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and do not reflect the opinions of their institutions, clients, friends, families or pets.