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Listen to a recap of the top stories of the day from 9to5Mac. 9to5Mac Daily is available on iTunes and Apple's Podcasts app, Stitcher, TuneIn, Google Play, or through our dedicated RSS feed for Overcast and other podcast players. Sponsored by 9to5Mac Daily Plus: Get ad-free versions of every episode by visiting 9to5mac.com/join. New episodes of 9to5Mac Daily are recorded every weekday. Subscribe to our podcast in Apple Podcast or your favorite podcast player to guarantee new episodes are delivered as soon as they're available. Stories discussed in this episode: This iPhone 16 Pro camera upgrade will fix a major pain point iPhone 16 Pro to shoot 4K 120fps videos, Camera Button tidbits Bloomberg: Sleep apnea detection will be the major new health feature for Apple Watch Series 10 - 9to5Mac Windows ARM PCs struggle to run games, Apple has an advantage Listen & Subscribe: Apple Podcasts Overcast RSS Spotify TuneIn Google Podcasts Subscribe to support Chance directly with 9to5Mac Daily Plus and unlock: Ad-free versions of every episode Bonus content Catch up on 9to5Mac Daily episodes! Don't miss out on our other daily podcasts: Quick Charge 9to5Toys Daily Share your thoughts! Drop us a line at happyhour@9to5mac.com. You can also rate us in Apple Podcasts or recommend us in Overcast to help more people discover the show.
In this month's edition of AppleVis Unleashed, Thomas Domville, Mike Malarsie, and John Gassman discuss recent Apple news and other topics of interest. Topics featured in this episode include:Introduction )00:00:00)Let's Talk about the new iPhone 15 (00:03:07)The Good, Bad, and Ugly of iOS 17 (00:16:16)Double Tap Fizzle for the Apple Watch Series 9 (00:27:11)Time Moves Fast. Scary Fast, you could Say (00:38:04)Farewell iTunes! Well, Sort Of... (00:49:19)Get Out of Here, How Much is Google Paying Apple? (00:50:26)Apple is Stomping Down on the Gas Pedal for GPT (00:56;46)Be My AI goes Public (01:01:17)Closing (01:07:00)Links:Is the iPhone 15 Pro Worth the Upgrade? How It Compares to Older iPhonesThis iPhone 15 Pro Action Button Shortcut will change your lifeiOS 17 and iPadOS 17 Accessibility Report: VoiceOver, Braille, and Low Vision Issues and ImprovementsApple Releases iOS 17.1 and iPadOS 17.1 With Many Fixes for VoiceOver UsersApple Watch Series 9 Review: New Tricks Make for a Minor Upgrade2024 Apple Watch ‘Unlikely' to Have ‘Significant Innovative Experiences'What to expect from Apple's unexpected ‘Scary Fast' evening Mac eventM3 Series MacBook Pro' to Be Focus of Apple's October 30 EventApple raises prices for Arcade gaming subscription service, AppleTV+ streamingReport: Apple planning revamped TV app, will discontinue dedicated iTunes movie and TV show appsGoogle pays Apple US$18-$20 billion a year to keep its search engine on the company's devicesApple's answer to ChatGPT could be ready in time for iPhone 16Apple could spend $5B on servers to catch up in AI raceAnnouncing ‘Be My AI,' Soon Available for Hundreds of Thousands of…
本環節的「輕鬆講科技」幾位 Moderator 與聽眾會討論一下在推出 Vision Pro,為 iPhone 15 帶來甚麼好處。 節目內容的參考資料,可按下面查閱: 標題:This iPhone 15 feature could truly unlock the Vision Pro's potential URL:https://www.techradar.com/news/this-iphone-15-feature-could-truly-unlock-the-vision-pros-potential 本環節來自 2023 年 6 月 20 日的 Clubhouse 科技節目 「輕鬆講科技」。全集重溫請按此:https://bit.ly/42QqCqL 「輕鬆講科技」是一個逢星期二及四,下午 1:30 在 Clubhouse App 進行直播 Podcast 節目,精華會放在各大 Podcast 平台予大家重溫。直播 Podcast 節目參予者,除可快人一步收聽整集節目直播,更可以運用 Clubhouse 功能,舉手跟主持人參予討論,或者在 Room Chat 以文字跟主持人聊天表達意見。Clubhouse 亦支持 Web 直播及 Replay 功能,若果你部手機沒有安裝 Clubhouse 或者你正在使用電腦,都可以直接透過瀏覽器收聽直播或重温。按這裡有 UpComing 的直播及重溫連結。 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/funtechnewshk/message
The latest In Touch With iOS with Dave he is joined by guests, Guy Serle, Kelly Guimont, and Jeff Gamet. iOS 16.5 is releasing next week. This iPhone is really a bargain compared to Android. The big news this week Apple announced Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro for iPad. The continued value of an Apple Watch saving people from serious medical issues. Protect your iPhone with security keys and more. The show notes are at InTouchwithiOS.com Direct Link to Audio Links to our Show Click this link Buy me a Coffee to support the show we would really appreciate it. intouchwithios.com/coffee Another way to support the show is to become a Patreon member patreon.com/intouchwithios Website: In Touch With iOS YouTube Channel In Touch with iOS Magazine on Flipboard Facebook Page Twitter Instagram News Apple Watch Pride Edition celebrates the LGBTQ+ community Apple Weather not working for some users, third time in a month [U: Fixed] Apple's former head of iCloud will be in charge of making GM EV software without CarPlay Instapaper adds new CarPlay app for reading articles with voice-to-text AirTag credited with helping investigators locate $1.1M in cash stolen from armored truck Apple Watch helps save woman's life after collapsing in a hotel room from a ruptured aorta Shazam Now Supports Apple Music Classical Topics Beta this week. iOS 16.5 RC Apple Confirms iOS 16.5 Will Be Released Next Week With These New Features Apple Seeds iOS 16.5 and iPadOS 16.5 Release Candidates to Developers and Public Beta Testers Apple Seeds watchOS 9.5 Release Candidate to Developers Apple Seeds Release Candidate Version of tvOS 16.5 to Developers Big news story and topic this week! Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro come to the iPad. Luma Fusion, Davinci Resolve, Capcut, Ferrite compared. Apple Announces Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro for iPad With Subscription Models Apple brings Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro to iPad - Apple Logic Pro iPad compatibility, features, release date, more Final Cut Pro for iPad: Price, release date, and everything else you need to know | iMore Apple sneak peek video: Final Cut Pro & Logic Pro now on iPad | Apple Is this true? We think so. As it turns out, the iPhone is actually a bargain compared to Android phones Security Tips How to Check Microphone Usage on iPhone How to Protect Your Apple ID With Security Keys Macstock 7 is here! Tickets are now available.Dave is speaking again at the event along with Jeff Gamet, Brittany Smith, Chuck Joiner, and many others. Please join in all the fun July 22-23, 2023! Speakers Link. Our Host Dave Ginsburg is an IT professional supporting Mac, iOS and Windows users and shares his wealth of knowledge of iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, Apple TV and related technologies. Visit the YouTube channel https://youtube.com/intouchwithios follow him on Mastadon @daveg65, Twitter @daveg65.and the show @intouchwithios Our Regular Contributors Jeff Gamet is a podcaster, technology blogger, artist, and author. Previously, he was The Mac Observer's managing editor, and Smile's TextExpander Evangelist. You can find him on Mastadon @jgamet as well as Twitter and Instagram as @jgamet His YouTube channel https://youtube.com/jgamet Ben Roethig Former Associate Editor of GeekBeat.TV and host of the Tech Hangout and Deconstruct with Patrice Mac user since the mid 90s. Tech support specialist. Twitter @benroethig Website: https://roethigtech.blogspot.com About our Guest Kelly Guimont is a podcaster and friend of the Rebel Alliance. She appears on The Incomparable network as well as hosts I Want My M(CU) TV. you can find her on Mastodon and Instagram @verso Guy Serle Is the host of the MyMac Podcast email Guy@mymac.com @MacParrot and @VertShark on Twitter Vertshark.com, Vertshark on YouTube, Skype +1 Area code 703-436-9501
This iPhone hack will change your life.The hoarder cleaner.Unhinged - Emma fix's dud dating profiles.Mike E & Emma are live on RnB Fridays Radio, on DAB and the LiSTNR app, weekdays 7-10am.Subscribe on LiSTNR: https://play.listnr.com/podcast/mike-e-and-emmaSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Imagine these four MBAs sitting in class when their phones start blowing up with orders for eyeglasses after they lost the business idea competition at the Warton School of Business for the same idea. Dave Young: Welcome to the Empire Builders Podcast, teaching business owners the not so secret techniques that took famous businesses from mom and pop to major brands. Stephen Semple is a marketing consultant, story collector and storyteller. I'm Stephen's sidekick and business partner, Dave Young. Before we get into today's episode, a word from our sponsor, which is, well, it's us, but we're highlighting ads we've written and produced for our clients. So here's one of those. [No Bull RV Ad] Dave Young: Welcome to the Empire Builders Podcast, Dave Young here, along with Stephen Semple, and we're talking about businesses and innovation and ideas that take a business from tiny to empire. There's usually something that they turn on, something that they come across, they figure out. And it makes all the difference. Today we're talking about, boy, this is another one of those that bridges the brick and mortar and online world and a bit of a disruptor, if I'm not mistaken. You said we're doing Warby Parker today, and I know that they're an online eyeglass company and I don't know much else. Stephen Semple: Well, they are an online glass company and they now have, gosh, I forgot to look up how many stores they have, but they now have a few hundred stores. So, they've started to open brick and mortar. But the part of the story we want to talk about is what they did when they were just strictly an online business because they went to the brick and mortar later. So again, the idea of these stories is to talk about the early days, what turned them into an empire. And that was when they were online. So we're going to focus today on the online part, but they were founded in 2010 is when they started by Neil Blumenthal, David Gilboa, Andy Hunt, and Jeff Raider. And in September 2021, they went public with an evaluation of almost $7 billion. But when they went public, yes, 7 billion. Dave Young: 7 billion. Stephen Semple: That's a little bit of a payoff, eh? Dave Young: Yeah, no kidding. Stephen Semple: Yeah. So founded in 2010, 11 years later, $7 billion. So, the idea started in 2008. And basically what happened is the guys were together and they were sharing their frustration with losing glasses and the cost to replace them. And these guys all met at the Wharton School of Business. They were students there and they all had this common frustration of buying glasses and they kept losing them. And the example that got them started was Dave talking about leaving glasses on an airplane. He left his glasses on the airplane and they cost $800. And at the same time, now think about this, it's different today when we look at the price of an iPhone. But in 2010 you could buy an iPhone for $200 and he's standing there going, "This iPhone is 200 bucks and these plastic glasses are 800." This makes no sense to him. And Andy who liked buying things online was frustrated that he couldn't easily buy glasses online. And they felt like the technology of how glasses were made and sold, felt so antiquated. And when they got talking about it turns out, talk about this weird connection. They get talking about it. It turns out Neil had experience in the glasses space. He had spent a number of years working for an eyewear nonprofit. So, he had been going to factories and buying glasses as cheaply as possible to be giving away in these third world countries. And this started a conversation and Neil would even be involved in the designing of this stuff and taking it to the factory. So he knew the business. And it turns out what he shared with them, is that the business was dominated by a handful of players. Companies like Luxottica. Luxottica is a $30 billion business. They make Oakley's, they make Ray-Ban,
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Today we welcome back Renee Sabo - owner of Urban Soiree out of Boston to talk about the hottest new social media app, Clubhouse. This iPhone user and invitation only app is all the talk, but what is it? Is it worth it? Host: Keith Willard - Keith Willard EventsBehind The Veil Crew:Marci Guttenberg - An Affair To Remember ByMarciBrooke Logan Stoner -Keith Willard EventsSpecial Guest: Renee Sabo - owner of Urban Soiree out of Boston and the host of the podcast: The Confetti Hour.One of our all-time favorite shows that truly goes Behind The Veil!Support the show
Welcome! This has been quite the week for Tech news with Big Tech lowering their Iron Fist on any opinions with which they don't agree. Social Media censorship is here and it has taught us that if you want to communicate freely you cannot and must not use their platforms or services. I will introduce you to a new service that is out of their control and completely decentralized -- like the original internet. Plus we will talk about Elon Musk, What'sApp and More so be sure to Listen in. For more tech tips, news, and updates, visit - CraigPeterson.com. --- Tech Articles Craig Thinks You Should Read: WhatsApp gives users an ultimatum: Share data with Facebook or stop using the app Insurrectionists’ social media presence gives feds an easy way to ID them Elon Musk is the world’s richest person What to expect from the first-ever virtual CES Google, Apple, and Amazon bans Parler Mastodon is the Only Open Social Network Remaining Malware Developers Refresh Their Attack Tools How the Shady Zero-Day Sales Game Is Evolving --- Automated Machine-Generated Transcript: Craig Peterson: [00:00:00] Hi, everybody. We're going to talk about the latest type of attack that's coming in. What you need to know about it. What's going on with this endpoint security with so many of us working from home and Amazon still has not fixed its bait and switch review problem. Craig Peterson here. Thanks for joining me. Hey, this is all about technology. Of course. If you're new, I do a lot of work with security. In fact, I've been doing it for a very long time. I have had training that I've conducted here for most of the fortune 500 companies. Federal agencies, almost all of them. In fact, and more than 5,000 small businesses have turned to me to help get their stuff done. So we tend to talk about security, but we'd talked about a lot of other technology subjects here on the show, and I really bring a different look to it, frankly. It's all about results. It's about what it means to you. I hope you understand a little bit better. I don't know about you, but I'm not real fond of just here's a list of what to do with no reason behind it. I want to know why I'm doing it. I remember going to a Tony Robbins event some years back, and one of the things he pointed out was, Hey, it's one thing to put it into your calendar. It's another thing, of course, to make a goal. But if you really want something to happen, you have to have your big, why. So what is your big why do I need to do this? That's what we're doing with our course. That's coming up here just in probably about two weeks. We're finishing it up. Now we spend a lot of time on this. It's an introduction to Windows security and helping you to lock down your Windows machines. I think it's a course, everybody should take, everybody should know about, and this is geared towards consumers. The things we need to do as just a regular person who might be working from home in order to tighten up Windows. Now we have much more advanced courses too, but this is all of your basics. So keep an eye out. I'll publicly do a couple of webinars as part of this. If you want to know more about it and get in on some of these free webinars and get this information, just send an email to me@craigpeterson.com and in the subject line. Put in Windows hardening or Windows course. Whatever you want so that I can figure out what's going on. Also, by the way, if you're listening to me, you might be the right person because I'm looking for someone to help me with handling all of these emails that I get. I have all kinds of filters in place. That's not what I'm worried about, what I'm worried about is getting answers to the people that need help. I tell people all the time, just email me@craigpeterson.com. I get tons of people every week, just hitting reply from the newsletter. I would like to be able to make sure that we have people who, or at least a person who's really responsible for this and who is going to, in fact, let everybody know that we are paying attention and rattle my cage. What, I haven't gotten an answer back to you because, right now it takes me a week, sometimes longer. To get back to you, so I got to apologize for that. If you're interested in that, if you're somebody who is really big into helping people and likes to understand the computer stuff a bit, maybe knows a bit about security. Maybe you're already on my email list, just signed up@craigpeterson.com. Send me an email me@craigpeterson.com. Let me know you're interested and why you're interested in it. I'll send you a little bit more information because I do try and give back to everybody, but I have a business to run with some very big clients and small clients, but a lot of work to do all of the time. It might take me a little while to get back to you until I find this perfect person who hopefully is sitting out there and wants to do a little bit of work from home, no matter where they are, as long as they can get and send emails. That's probably about all the bandwidth they'll need, so you don't need a whole bunch of it. Me@craigpeterson.com for any questions or comments or anything else. Getting into our first article of the week. This one's from reading. And they're talking about the denial of service attacks. In fact, more specifically distributed denial of service attacks, spiking, right? This year, well in 2020, and it became more complex as well. So I wanted everyone to understand what a denial of service attack is because it is probably the number one reason that the. Quote internet, isn't working unquote denial of service attacks or where a bad guy decides that they want to hold a company hostage. How do you do that? In this day and age, people are all over the place. You're not about to walk in the front door armed and tell everybody, Hey, pay up or I'm not leaving. That's just not going to happen. Is it? When will you get right down to it? You don't have to do that anymore. You don't have to have a real hostage. All you have to do is say, Hey, we're going to hold your servers hostage. Now you probably know already about ransomware and ransomware is a real big problem. It is growing. It has been out there for a long time and we're, ransomware where they gain access to your systems. And they do one of two things, or even both one is. They will grab all of the data that looks interesting to them. So they'll look through your spreadsheets. I'll look through the documents that you have out there. They'll try and find information that they think that they could extort you with. And then the second thing they'll do is encrypt your files and say, pay up if you want to get your files back. And unfortunately many companies, many organizations, including healthcare organizations, government agencies, state, as well as federal. And locals have all been hit by this. And they find that their backups are not good enough. They either weren't working properly and they thought they were working or many times what happens is a, just weren't doing it at all. And so all of a sudden, all of their files are. Encrypted do you know the important ones and they just can't conduct business anymore. Of course, the first step is they've got to clean up all of these machines that have been infected before they even can do the backup. So in many cases, people are paying the ransom, even though it's been made clear by the state department and others that pane the ransom is supporting terrorism. And what they're doing now is. Bringing charges against some of these companies who should have been secure, because if you are a public company or even if you just have basic shareholders, not even a publicly-traded company and you are effectively out of business and by the way, getting one of these ransomware attacks can put you out of business. Most of the time it does put you out of business. And so they get. Sued and civilly and potentially criminally as well for sending a hundred thousand dollars, $10 million to terrorists around the world, which of course encourages them to go ahead and ran some more companies. Also lets them know that, Hey, you'll pay a ransom. So why not ransom you? It seems like a good idea. Doesn't it? And Oh, guess what they do ransom you and they'll ransom you again. You get the double whammy where you now have to try and get back into business so you say, okay it's going to be way cheaper to pay the ransom, which is what they want. That's part of the reason they looked at all your files to see if they can get the County records. How big a company are you? How much could you pay? Cause they're not going to charge a ransom of $10 million to some poor person who's retired. Just trying to go online and. The next step is they say, okay guys, you haven't paid the ransom. If you do not pay this extortion fee, we're going to release all of your files online. So now you're going to get. They extorted. And in other words, they'll say, Hey, we grabbed all of these files and they'll give you the names of some of the files Neil just gasp. Oh my gosh. That's our business plan for next year. That's our competitive analysis. Oh, that's our intellectual property. Those are all of the designs we've been working on for the last few years or decades in some cases. And I probably should do something about this. What can I do? Pay up this extortion money and we won't release them online. Now of course, sometimes they release them anyway. And the other big problem that people have with this sort of thing is if it does get out, you might actually be breaking a law. You might have what's called CUI or other information that really could nail. You legally with the federal or state government. So there's a whole lot of problems there. So that's one of the ways the bad guys are ransoming and extorting money from people, but there is another very big deal. And that's what we are talking about right now, which is a denial of service attack. And one of the beautiful things. Form from the standpoint of the bad guy with a denial of service attack is it's almost impossible to trace the source of the attack and it puts the company that's under attack out of business. So how would you like that when you get attacked by someone you don't know who's attacking you, you may not even know? Why because many times these types of attacks, which are increasingly cheaper for the bad guys to do many times, these types of attacks are conducted by social activists. Yeah, our green warriors out there and others who will start attacking in these inexpensive ways. Of course, you can find all kinds of information online, subscribe to my podcast as well. You'll find it on your favorite podcast platform and online@craigpeterson.com. We were just talking about ransomware, how it's being used to hold hostage, various companies, as well as being used for extortion. Pretty bad things. Now we're going to talk about a cheaper and easier way. The bad guys are. He didn't us. Hi guys, this is really a fun world, a scary world, all rolled into one because the bad guy's methods are becoming more effective and cheaper for them to conduct. That's the scary side of this whole thing. Because these bad guys are out there making many millions of dollars. It used to be difficult to do. They used to have a bad guy that really understood programming and understood the bugs that were existing in our networks and in our computers. Pulling all of that stuff together, trying to make the whole world really a worse place. It was just a very few people and then the dark web really grew where the bad guys that we're writing the software. Now we're selling it on online forums. You can go online and for 10 or 20 bucks, you can buy software that does all of the ransom stuff for you. If you don't mind giving away five or 10% of your illegal proceeds, all you have to do is. Sign up for an online service that will do everything for you on the backend of the ransomware. They'll do the tech support for the people who have been ransomed. They'll go ahead and yeah, they'll even take phone calls when the people are saying, okay, so how do I pay this? How do I buy Bitcoin in order to pay you? How do I make any of this stuff work? How do I put in this key that you sent me? It doesn't seem to be decrypting. What do I do? Absolutely amazing. It is really quite an industry. Then there's obviously pretty complicated and there are simpler ways for the bad guys to nail us. This is what's happened over the last year. 2020 set records over what are called distributed denial of service attacks. How they're used to harass organizations, extort them as well. The basic idea is you as an organization, have a website and it might be a federal government website. It might be your local soccer team or state or federal. It doesn't really matter. The extorter will say unless you do what we tell you to do. Which might be to pay a ransom or stop oil drilling in Alaska? It might be anything right. Some of these anarchists are out there and if you don't do it, what we're going to do is we're going to shut down your website. For a lot of businesses shutting down the website is a terrible thing because so much of their profit comes from the website. So many people mis-think profit. I was just thinking about this last week. Profit is not bad. It is not evil. Profit is what pays for the light bill. Profit is what pays for the medical plan. Pays for the employees. Pays for the physical facilities. Pays the employees electric bills for the home, for the cars, for everything. Okay. Profit is not evil. Profit is absolutely necessary in order for us to live. If you're getting money. You are getting the proceeds from a profit that was made by somebody. Now, obviously, if you work for a government agency that is taking money from people, I wouldn't consider that profit. If you are a regular person and entrepreneur or an employee, that profit is absolutely necessary. When one of these green warriors says, you got to stop drilling, or you've got to stop manufacturing this, or you need to free this person, et cetera, et cetera. You are worried because what are they going to do to you? Then you find out they're going to put you out of business. Then what do you do? So many companies have been complying. You see it all of the time, the people are extorting, various media outlets saying unless you stop taking or stop advertising on this program. It might be Glenn Beck. It might be Rush Limbaugh might be met any of these conservative radio programs. You'd like to listen to. Unless you stop advertising on those we're going to shut your website down. Most of these businesses concede. They give in to these terrorist demands that are made by these organizations. What they're afraid of is if these organizations do a denial of service attack, that their website's going to be unavailable and they are no longer going to be able to conduct business. That's just one of the things. There's other things that these bad guys do to extort businesses. When you go to a website and you go to the checkout page on that website, what's really happening? Obviously, you're sending a request to the webserver and it's a request for a page and it has to go through an encryption-decryption. Then it has to go into the back end that keeps track of everything in your cart. Then it has to go when they accept the payment, which might be a credit card, et cetera, et cetera. These web servers can only handle a certain amount of traffic. You've heard it before. Oh, my server crashed because I had just this heavy load on it. Too many people are trying to buy my product, which is actually not a bad thing. There are also problems with the amount of bandwidth. So you have a server. Great. It can handle a thousand requests per second. Let's say, which is pretty darn big servers is probably actual little server farm and the network connection to that server or server farm can only handle a hundred requests a second. So you've wasted money on the backend. So you tend to try and size that all appropriately. So you're not just pouring money down the drain. What happens with a distributed denial-of service attack is they get dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of computers to try and go in into the cart, try and do a checkout, trying and pull up pages that maybe have a lot of heavy graphics on them so that the server now has a huge load as does the network connection. So they're saying, okay, so what do I do about it now? There are some ways to deal with these types of attacks. Are some companies out there I can point you to, if you want to just drop me an email. If you have a web server you're concerned about maybe this happening to you, I can point you in the right direction to CloudFlare or some of these other ones that are out there. Just email me@craigpeterson.com. Be glad to let you know a little bit more about it. But it is hard to shut down, particularly if you are a very small business and your internet provider has never really heard of you before. And the people who are maintaining this server you're in the same boat. You're paying me. How much am I? $8. Yeah, no, sorry. We're not gonna, we can't really help you. And in fact, they don't help you. And that can be, even if you're paying couple-hundred bucks, depends on the quality of the people that you're working with. So what they'll do then is have all of these computers hit it's called hitting the web server, trying to gain access to things and shut it down. Now, there are some services, as I mentioned that you can use to help stop these things once are underway. But the barrier to entry for performing a denial of service attack is extremely low. There are all kinds of, hire services that allow attackers to launch bigger and more consequential attacks. And it's pretty simple to orchestrate. So we've gotta be very careful. Global pandemic drove a sharp increase in these types of attacks. And they're going to continue. They're going to continue because they make money. Man. I'm looking at the FBI advisory on this too. It's frankly, pretty scary. We're going to talk about the crack in businesses' cyber armor and it might be you. Verizon's 2020 mobile security report has found that foreign 10 companies were breached through a mobile device. With so many of us working from home, frankly, this is really bad news. Mobile endpoint security is a real problem, frankly. It's the crack in our organization's cyber armor. We have mobile devices. Many of us are using Android, which you guys already know. Then I say you probably should not be used because of a few problems. The biggest problem, frankly, with it Android is that the security updates just don't make it onto most Android phones when you get right down to it. Big problem is that the manufacturers do not take the updates from Google, for Android, for security problems and put them on all of their devices. In fact, in most cases, you're looking at a six-month window before most of these devices have the security updates installed on them. If they ever get installed and looking at some of the statistics about which version of Android these devices are running, it's frankly very scary. So it's a huge problem. It's why I always recommend iOS Apple devices. The I-phones the eye pads for most businesses. If you need the utmost insecurity while there's some other things you probably need to look at, however iOS and the iPhone was certified by the military a couple of years ago. It's reasonably safe. Of course, nothing's perfect. But. Bottom line, a combination of these best in class technologies, like the I-phones and following some instructions I'm about to give here are really the front line in helping our organizations, our businesses, and you from falling victim to these ever-growing threats. These bad guys are extremely well-funded. We just saw Vietnam enter into the league of nations that are known as hackers attacking us. No, we've known about North Korea, China, Russia, Iran. Now we've got Vietnam. And many of those nations have a whole lot of money and their goal is not necessarily to extort all of that money from us. In many cases, the goal is just to cause havoc and confusion, and man, have they been good at doing that? So if they develop a tool. And then they share that tool with hackers all over the world. They've accomplished their goals, haven't they? Because they're causing havoc now. And in the case of North Korea, they do want hard currency. No question about it. But these tools that are for sale for cheap out on the dark web are being developed. By Russian and Chinese hackers for the most part official ones, they're working for their governments. Mobile devices have really been at the core of many of the 2020s. Highest profile attack. So for instance, we talked about this attack against Amazon CEO. Bezos's I phoned compromise incident. And what happened when a mobile device was penetrated by. Just using some bugs in an application and a video that was sent and opened. Okay. So you got to be careful about these things. That's another reason why in my windows hardening course, my introduction course, I really stress removing apps. You don't absolutely need it. And another thing that I talk about in this introduction to a windows security course is. The problem we have of the apps we use to communicate. And that's what nail Jeff Bezos. The guy got a divorce and it was just amazing the amount of money that was part of that divorce settlement. But he was using an app that he didn't need to be using, and that's how they got onto his phone and were able to grab other things. So just removing those apps, but. I'm really concerned right now about WhatsApp because so many people are using it. I've gotten questions. I've received questions from some of our listeners who have family members who are in the military overseas, and they're asking, Hey, can we use WhatsApp in order to have a secure chat with my daughter or husband, wife, whomever, it might be overseas in the military. And although WhatsApp is the most popular communications app it's got over. I think it's 2 billion users worldwide and it has had end ending encryption remember Facebook bought it a couple of years ago. And that makes it dangerous. And the new terms that have to be accepted for using WhatsApp in the future, indicate that Facebook really is starting to play some games here with how secure WhatsApp really is. So I go into a lot of detail in one of the modules on how to communicate securely, but there you go, Jeff Bezos, which was very expensive to him. Came in from a mobile device, simple fishing, most common way, mobile devices get compromised. And this is where you typically get an email that looks like it's from the bank or Amazon. And you click on a link and unfortunately, Because of the lockdown. So many of us are working from home using our own devices. And what that means is many of these devices have not been vetted by any form of security, professional. Okay. It's really bit of a problem and there's been a 37% increase worldwide. And according to this Verizon report in mobile fishing, Just between the last quarter of 2019 and the first of 2020 now add to that, the whole lockdown. And it's gotten a lot worse and that's according to the lookout who tries to keep tracking some of these things. We've also got the problem of a malicious wifi hotspot. So don't connect to those. What I advise you to do if you're out. On the road you're maybe at the airport or coffee shop? The good old days, right? Don't use the local wifi. Use your cell phone, use your data plan and have your cell phone. Tether your computer to go online. That's much safer than using wifi hotspots. And we go into quite a bit of training on that as well, in my introduction to windows security courses. So what happens if their security fails. That's where again, you've got to be using something that's moderately or fairly secure, like the iPhone, by the way. Oh gee, Phil Zimmerman. They started another company. I don't remember what it was called now. If you're interested, drop me an email. I'll look it up. But they have. Phones that are designed to be highly secure and they're actually Android-based, which they would have to be because Apple doesn't really so source code, unlike Android, you can get most of that source code. Anyways, worst outcomes here. Number one, some of these are very hard to detect some of these intrusions. They're hard to get rid of in many cases, and these are real problems. Rule number one, never jailbreak your phone because that's going to open you up to all kinds of problems. There could be spy where payloads that are put onto your phone, but the bottom line don't jailbreak them. Keep them up to date. Don't use Android. If you must use Android. The simple rule is to stick with the major manufacturers like Samsung and use their state-of-the-art phone, whatever the best one is that they have, and upgrade your phone at least every two years. If you're using Android. If you're using iOS, you got five years, which is why I phones tend a lot cheaper, frankly, and require encryption. All right. Lots more to talk about. I use Amazon all of the time, but there are some things to be very cautious about when it comes to Amazon. It's really not the trusted platform that I started using more than a decade ago. So we're going to get into that right now, bait and switch. If you miss any part of today's show, you can also find it online@craigpeterson.com. Amazon has a lot of problems. In the last segment, we're just talking about how it's CEO got hacked via a message that came in through a messaging app. It was actually a video and it is a problem, right? So you've got that sort of a problem. You have the problem of being a small business and trying to compete with Amazon. I will admit that I use Amazon a lot for buying things. It's just simpler. The first thing you have to remember when you're using Amazon is they don't necessarily have the best price. In fact, many cases, they are not even close to the best price, both Amazon and Walmart have some amazing, huge stores online target, of course, does as well as some others, but. When you compare the prices between them. I think you might be a little surprised. One of the things Amazon's done to lock us in is this Amazon prime membership, which is really handy. You get some of the best deals because they have their prime day. Plus they have some special deals that are just for prime members at different times of the year. That's going to cost you more than a hundred bucks a year for that prime membership. But frankly, it makes up for it in shipping if you use a lot. And I'm sure that's part of what they're thinking here, right? And they also now because of courts and really being forced into it, they have a little notice saying that this price might not be the best price and it's available from other sellers. So you can click through and it'll show you other sellers that are there. On Amazon's website who have products that are, Amazon's also selling, but yeah, they might be cheaper. Usually when you add that less expensive price, plus what that other vendor on amazon.com wants to charge you for shipping. It's usually about the same price as what Amazon's going to offer it to you for. So keep that in mind when you're shopping, the price might not be the best. What looks like a great deal with the price. Mark might not be such a great deal after all. So buyer beware, right? But there's another problem. I, this last year for present got one of those massagers. Now I've really been into massagers for many decades. Now I used to get them a Brookstone. They always had the best selection. And so I just buy it from them. Since I got to try it in the store. And it was it was really great. And Brookstone in fact, was headquartered right in my hometown in Merrimack, New Hampshire. I thought that was cool too. Cause it's a supporting a local business. Of course, they were purchased. I think it was SIM bought them. And then I have no idea what they're doing nowadays. It closes most if not all of their stores, but anyway, so I've always liked the massagers. They help with those aches and pains that you get at any age. And particularly as you get a little bit older and. There was a massager that my massage therapist was using. And they just, one of these little percussive handheld things, it almost looks like a gun and it has a bunch of different attachments you can put on the end and it goes back and forth and just percussively massages. It does an amazing job. It gets the muscles that are tight to let go to loosen up. And so I went online and I found what I thought was probably the massagers she was using. She told me, and then of course I forgot what it was and there were dozens of them available on Amazon. So what do you look for social proof, right? Isn't that the normal way? So I look in for social proof, which is, Oh, here's the one with the thousand reviews and with the. Oh, five stars or four and a half star raining. Great. Let me just stop. I'll do that. Let me buy that. And you can always return it if it doesn't work. So I did buy it and it did work. And let me tell you, I'm just so happy with it, but what I noticed inside the package, it was a little card and I've been seeing this more and more on products that I buy from Amazon. Where the person who's actually fulfilling this order, send you a little notice and maybe ask for some feedback or says, Hey, don't complain to Amazon. If you have problems, go directly to us and we'll make sure it gets resolved because they want those five-star reviews from you legitimately. You can't blame the moment. If something happens, which it can happen, nothing's perfect. And they'd tear, take care of it. Lickety-split. I'm still going to give them that five-star review that they frankly deserve because it's a good little product. It wasn't necessarily their fault that there was some form of infant mortality, which does happen. And it happens with anybody any time you buy any sort of technology. So I. What did the card a little more closely at to see what it was and guess what they were doing? They said, Hey, listen, if you go on to Amazon and review our product, now they didn't say you had to give us a five-star review, but that was almost implied. If you go on to Amazon and review our product and you send us a picture of the review that you made by email. You can choose one of these gifts. And one of the gifts was a battery. For that massager. There were a couple of others that I don't remember cause the battery is the most appealing to me and I thought what the heck? I'm going to review it anyway. So I did and I sent them a picture of my email and it's been over a month and I haven't gotten my free battery. They got me to wondering what's really going on here. And I found an article here by Tim Lee over at ARS Technica. Saying that he bought for his kids, this little $24 drone very cool drone. And he gave it to his daughter to play with. And I'm not sure who the other kids were, but one of the propellers got stuck in her hair after the kids were playing with it for a few hours. It's really a cool one. It's got four propellers, but the whole thing is enclosed inside a little cage so that the kids can't really get their fingers into it and potentially get hurt. Although most of these little tiny drones, you can get whacked with those propellers, and it's not going to hurt at all. Really. They had fun. They were able to play around with it. But after that first few hours, it just basically stopped working because it got caught in the hair and that's going to happen. So he went online on Amazon and decided to do a search and he found a great review here. He searched for children's drone and sorted them by average customer review. Which makes sense to me. And he found a $23 drone with 6,400 reviews and an impressive five-star average rating. So let's promise you, that's what I would do, right? How about you? I, I think that's what most of the, most of us are doing. There's your social proof. But then he started to look at the five-star reviews. And this is something I talked about on the show about a year ago. How do you tell if the reviews are legitimate or not? While you can do a few things, one is looking for major grammatical errors, which a lot of these reviews have, but here's what he found now. Remember. This is supposedly a review for a drone. It says wonderful texture and great taste. Five stars. Absolutely love this, honey. It's quite different from any supermarket purchase, honey out tried. It's rich, thick, fragrant, and tastes wonderful. It's on the expensive side. Yes, but also worth it. The packaging is paper metal and glass in the jars. Definitely, be reused or recycled. There we go. There's a grammatical error, but not a lot of them. It goes on and on raving about this honey. This is a drone. So what's going on here? This is a real problem. Here's another review that he found. If you're looking to have a taste of Greece without making the journey, this honey does the trick. That was another customer, supposedly that same month, the third one wrote that it was dark luxurious pine honey, not too sweet, absolutely fantastic. With strained, creaky, yogurt and extra cream. Now he said, when you read the reviews on Amazon by date, he saw that the most recent reviewers actually had. Bought a drone and they were overwhelmingly not giving it five stars. Bought this from my grandson, a customer wrote on December 26. He played with the, for two hours before broke and it's no longer working. He gave the drone one star. But all these older reviews were for honey. So apparently the manufacturer had tricked Amazon and just thousands of reviews for an unrelated product below its a drone, helping the drone to unfairly rise to the top of Amazon. Search results. So there's, I think a very big word of caution. There's a lot of examples on Amazon about this sort of thing. This iPhone 10 battery case listing used to be for a leather wallet, phone case. Another battery case was formally listed for lightning charging cables, a Wi-Fi router that was listed as nanocomputers previously. Been by the way that one collecting reviews since 2003, here's a neck brace. It was formerly a shower caddy listing. Guitar string action gauge is now a page for magnetic glue, free eyelashes. So Amazon does say that they have clear guidelines about one product that should be grouped together, and they have guardrails. They call them in place to prevent abuse, but this is one type of abuse. And it's pretty obvious because a drone is not honey. So if you were actually to read those reviews, which obviously this guy that wrote this over to our set, Anika, Timothy Lee had not done before you started having problems. But if you actually read the reviews and they're all for the right product, then what. What about this back massager that I got this little massager. Is that gonna show up this way? No, it's not because people are going to give it the five-star reviews because they want the gifts are going to be headed their way. So be very cautious. Amazon has not solved this problem yet. We still got a lot to talk about, including taxes here. For those of us working from home, a big shocker coming. You might be in for a bit of a shock if you have been working remotely due to this whole lockdown thing. In fact, millions of us are going to have a bit of a shock coming up soon. We have been busy here for the first hour. Talking a little bit about the Amazon bait and switch reviews. What I do when I'm online shopping and how you can help keep yourself not just safer, but make sure you don't get ripped off. We went through an article from ARS Technica about how he did get ripped off for gifts this season. We also talked a little bit about mobile endpoint security, some of the problems that frankly we've had with our mobile devices. How Jeff Bezos in fact got a massive problem. I got involved with his divorce and everything else because of his mobile device and denial of service attacks. What that is all about? We're going to talk this hour a bit about our remote. Workforce the tax implications. We've got another arrest and jail time. So we're going to talk about bad facial recognition and what's going on there. Cyber resilience. And what can we do this year? I really want to get into these hacked home cameras used to live stream police, weight raids in what are called swatting attacks. And then. Solar winds mine. I was just because me, cause there are so many ways this massive hack could have been avoided. Our federal agencies have been compromised. Microsoft now says that due to this SolarWinds, hack somebody God into Microsoft source code. Those are the key to the kingdom. And one of the ways Microsoft realizes to stay secure is by keeping it source code secret. And of course we, no, that's work. Microsoft has never had any vulnerabilities. So we'll get into that a lot to talk about this hour. First off, let's talk about this problem with taxes. Many of us have problems, if you work in Maine and you work in Massachusetts, you could have a little bit of a tax problem, but there is a reciprocal agreement that's in place. So if you had been working in mass and you live in Maine, Okay. I can see that you're driving down to mass every day and you're living in Maine. So the reciprocity agreement covers that. But how about if you have never stepped foot in Massachusetts? How about if you started working for a company out of New York or a company out of California? Did you realize that many of these, all of them, by the way, Democrat administrations are now going to require you to pay state taxes, Connecticut, you name it. All of these, it is very concerning to me. And when we get right down to workforces and the fact that this whole lockdown has really accelerated this trend of working from home. And because of that, we've got employers who are letting their workers perform their jobs remotely from home most, if not all of the time. So where does illegal nexus tie in? So they're saying, Hey, listen, your employer. And you both knew exactly where you live and work, but the state departments of taxation can have some very different ideas about where here is. So as a result, Texas, Utah, Arkansas workers who are working for New York or Massachusetts based companies will have income taxes with health in the paychecks, even if they've never set foot in the home office. Or never set foot in this state. How about that one? The thing for New Hampshire if you live in Maine, of course. Yeah. A lot of these states that have state income taxes, will go ahead and say, okay you don't have to worry about paying our state income tax as well. Or in some cases, they look at it and say, Oh, you pay less state income tax. Then we charge our residents. I don't want to call them citizens because we are not being treated like true citizens anymore, but you pay less in your home state than our residents pay. So you don't have to make up the difference as well. So we've gotten dozens of major companies out there all the way through little guys who have been increasing their support from working from home permanently. And I think that's great. We have businesses closing offices. Thank goodness. I don't own business space. We've lent our leases laps counting on physical distance, flexible workforce was going to reduce real estate needs. I know one of my daughters is in that boat right now. And in many ways it can be a win-win employer can save overhead costs on those expensive square footage and high demand cities look at what's happened right now in San Francisco. For instance, they are a great example of San Francisco. The city has lost 43% of its tax revenue. So you look at it until K while they've lost a lot of tax revenue because of the lockdown and people aren't going out shopping. They're not buying stuff. No. According to the San Francisco economist and yes, indeed the city of San Francisco has its own economists. Know that a 43% drop in revenue is due to people moving out of the city. New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, all expensive, and people are moving to Maine, to Montana, dial in from the woods or get a nice little place down in Florida for instance. But as far as the state's concerned, your beachside can banner might. Just as well be right in the middle of downtown Manhattan and you're going to be taxed as such. So we've had these problems for a long time, but living in one state, working in another, but typically it's been adjacent States, just like again, Maine and Massachusetts, right? DC, Maryland, Virginia, maybe Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Delaware. Kansas City itself goes across two States. You've got Kansas City, Kansas, and Kansas City, Missouri. So traveling across city limits can mean crossing state lines as well. So any major city near a border has lots of workers that go over the lines back and forth every day. And that's always been tricky from a tax perspective. Because both the state where you work and the state where you live is going to want to try and tax your income, but still typically only one state at a time has been able to tax you for your income. And most jurisdictions with a lot of overlaps have agreements, as I said, main and mass and New Hampshire doesn't really have that agreement because they don't have any state income tax or of course sales tax on almost anything. But. This is really going to be a problem, frankly. So keep in mind that if you are working for a company that is headquartered or even just has a presence in Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts, Nebraska, New York, and Pennsylvania. All of those States have convenient rules on the books that require any work performed for an employer-based in their state. That it be taxed as if the worker performing the job is actually. In the state, no matter where the employee is actually located now, New Hampshire is one of the nine states that does not have an income tax. And it's right now in the process of suing Massachusetts over its convenience rules and for other States, by the way, New Jersey, Connecticut, Hawaii, and Iowa are supporting the suit. So we'll see what happens there in federal courts. As you probably already know going to court doesn't mean the right thing is going to happen. It's gotten really bad, but at any rate, something to be careful about, if you are working remotely for a company, many of these States are going to become an after you for tax dollars. We got a couple of things to get in. I want to talk right now about facial recognition. We what a year, maybe more ago talked about this company called clear view AI Clearview. And what they've been doing has been questionable. They've gone online and done searches. They've combed through social media. And they've found and downloaded every picture. They can get the grubby little paws on, and then what they've done is they've put together some facial recognition software. So they've violated laws. They've violated platform rules. It's almost like Facebook when it got started, where apparently Zuckerberg went ahead and stole. All of the records of all of the kids that were there, going to school at Harvard and including their photographs and put together this little Facebook thing, the Facebook, and had people rating other people by their looks, et cetera, and just basically stole. To get his business started Facebook. That's the allegation that's been out there. There'd been a whole movie by this, about what he did. So that's what Clearview did too. They went ahead and decided we'll just steal all of the photos we can of people. They tied facial recognition software into it, and they perform scans of these images that were scraped from the internet and created a biometric database of the images. We're going to talk about that and how we now have people being wrong, not just accused, but arrested, spent jail time. It's a crazy world out there. The allegations are that Clearview stole your picture without your consent and without the consent of the websites you put them on. Now they are being used in this biometric database by the police and others with wrongful arrests. Hey, if you want to hear the whole show or an older show, you can find them, just go online to Craig peterson.com. You'll see the podcasts there. I podcast the whole radio show, as well as my appearances on radio and television right there. So you can listen to them as podcasts there or on your favorite podcast app. There you go. So we were talking about Clearview using these images that were scraped from the internet illegally. In some cases against obvious usage agreement, as well. Now is that they've got this biometric database of the images and they can use that database to match an image of one person to one of these preexisting images that has been analyzed and scanned and maybe stolen, right? Depending on how you want to look at it, the allegations are all the way across the board. Now neither you nor anybody else whose image was scraped from the internet, even know that it happened. Let alone give Clearview permission to use your image, right? They didn't get permission to take it, and they're not going to get permission to use it. So the details of these practices are not well-received by anybody out there. Even the New York Times came out about it last January, which is when I really started talking about it as well. Within three days of the New York times talking about what this Clearview company did, there was a federal class-action suit that was filed. And the complaint opened with a quote from justice Brandice that the greatest, dangerous to Liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal well-meaning, but without understanding. So it's very interesting. There's a whole bunch of cases. I'm looking at the list of them right now. These will take a while before everything is finalized on them, but here's something we absolutely. Do know for a fact. And that is that there have been arrests that have been made due to this database. Anyone who identifies as a policeman can go ahead and download the app onto their iPhone or another device. And can then just take a picture of someone casually on the street. There are people who are making police cameras that are constantly streaming video. And on the backend are trying to do facial recognition. I've had a couple of them on my radio show a few years back, and it's cool because it gives the policemen an idea of, is this a bad guy or not? There is this somebody who we should trust somebody we could trust. I'm not really that worried about it. Just. Think about the most dangerous thing most pleased officers do, which is a traffic stop. They have no idea who's in the car. If that person's going to try and attack them, et cetera. So having a live stream, thinking about Robocop, which didn't end that well, and what was happening there with the ed two Oh nines as well as Robocop himself, being able to see a person and be able to tell right away what this person's background is if there's any wants or warrants, et cetera, out there. That's all well and good to a certain degree, but we just had another man. This is a New Jersey man who was accused of shoplifting and trying to hit a police officer with a car. He was wrongfully arrested based on facial recognition. Now, in this case, it's a black man and these facial recognition software programs that are available. Tend to do poorly with any minority, frankly. And or do terribly with some and do poorly with any of them and also do rather poorly with the good old, regular Caucasian in phases like mine. Okay. So this is a third person who's arrested for a crime. He did not commit. He spent 10 days in jail and paid around $5,000 to defend himself. So this is a guy that had nothing to do with it. The police got lazy, they said, Oh, we got a facial recognition match. It's this guy because they ran it through some software that had scraped some photos from the internet. Do you see where I'm going with this? And those photos from the internet say it's probably this guy, Nigeria parks. And we know his social media is saying it's Nigeria parks. This is where he lives. This is where he posts most of his pictures because you remember our pictures. When we take them, our smartphones have embedded GPS information. Oh, my gosh. And in this particular case, he was apparently 30 miles away from the scene of the crime. Okay. Pretty sad. Pretty sad. They dismissed the case because of a lack of evidence. Isn't that wonderful? But the department is now getting sued along with the prosecutor in the city of Woodbridge for false arrest, false imprisonment, and violation of his civil rights. I think he should absolutely win on that. 2019. And this is an article that came from the New York Times. They're saying a national study of over a hundred facial recognition algorithms found that they didn't work as well on black and Asian. Faces, as I said a little bit earlier see an ACL or attorney named Wessler believes that police should stop using facial recognition technology. I am okay with it to a degree. I don't think you should be issuing any sort of an arrest warrant based on facial recognition. I think you might get a clue from that and. From that clue, you can look at the phases and decide for yourself and interview the suspect, do some good old fashioned police work, but this facial recognition arresting people, putting them in jail and then costing them thousands of dollars plus their time and their reputation and what it does to your nerves and everything else is just absolutely insane. And bad arrests. So this article in the New York times goes through what happened. Apparently, the officers had been presented with a fraudulent driver's license, one of the officer's report,s or did that. They saw a big bag of suspected marijuana in the man's prof pocket. They tried to handcuff him and that's when he ran, he had a rental car just goes on and on, but. It was a problem. And even though Mr. Parks had been arrested twice and incarcerated for selling drugs release back in 2016, doesn't mean that he's the guy that did all of this. So let's be careful. I'm not fond of what Clearview has done, obviously, just based on how I described it and who I quoted. And I don't like the idea of using this facial recognition technology to arrest people. Bottom line. So speaking about arresting people, when we get back, we're going to talk about what is called swatting attacks. I don't know if you've heard of these before. They're pretty common, unfortunately, and some of the technology that we've been bringing into our homes to keep us safer is now being used to put our lives in danger if you can believe that. Yeah, absolutely true. We'll be talking about that. You can also follow me online. Just go to Craig peterson.com. You can subscribe to my newsletter. I'm not an active poster in Facebook or anywhere else, so the newsletter is the best place to get my weekly show summaries. We're going to talk about how some of our technology we're bringing into our homes to keep us safe is actually ending up in killing people. Yeah. Yeah. Death by a police officer. Here we go. If you want to see my show notes, all you have to do is subscribe. Craig peterson.com. And once you're there, you'll see all of the information. That I have available my podcasts and a little articles that we've written, and you'll also have the opportunity to subscribe to my newsletter. So I'll keep you up to date with the latest, most important articles of the week. I don't send all of my show notes anymore. I found that a lot of people. Just don't open them cause it's overwhelming. So I've been lately trying to focus on one tip in particular. So we'll see how this all goes in the future and you can always let me know what you think. Just email me ME@craigpetersohn.com. I'd love to know, do prefer to get all of my show notes every week or do you prefer what I've been doing lately, which is a deeper dive into one topic. That seems to be pretty popular, but I'm getting about a 40% interaction rate, which is really good on such a large list. I just want to get the message out is my bottom line. We have these home cameras that we have welcomed into our homes. And one of the ones that has been getting a lot of heat lately is the ring camera. I don't know if you've seen these things. They've been advertised on television and it's basically like a little doorbell. You put it out there by your front door, side door, whatever, and it has a doorbell button. And it also has a camera and a speaker that's built into it. Then the microphone, obviously. So someone comes to the door or rings to the doorbell. There's an app that you can have on your phone. So you could be at the beach. You could be at the DMV. Someone comes to your home and hits that button. You can now converse with them and tell them to leave the package or go away or whatever it is you want to do. There have been some problems. One of them that has been rather controversial is that there are a number of police departments that are part of a program with Ring that gives them a live real-time access to all of the ring doorbells in neighborhoods. And the idea there is the police can patrol the neighborhoods without having to spend money on cameras that might be up on telephone poles, et cetera. And they get their feeds alive from people's doorbell cams, these ring doorbell cams. So that could be considered good. It could be considered bad, just like about almost anything. Now we're seeing that they have been hacked. Yes, indeed. There is a hack that's out there that has been used and hijackers have been live streaming people's Ring, doorbell cameras. Now where this gets really dangerous and where it hasn't been really dangerous is something called swatting. You probably know about SWAT teams, the police have, and unfortunately, most federal agencies have their own SWAT teams, which just constantly blows my mind because of why. Does this little department or that little department need of full SWAT team, it should really be a police department of some sort, but at any rate the whole idea behind a SWAT team is they have special weapons and tactics that they can use in a situation where there might be a hostage or maybe there's a report of a bomb or something else that they have to take care of. And thank God these teams exist in, they do drills. They'll do drills in schools. I know my police department does that fairly frequently and I was involved with some of those when I was a volunteer on the ambulance squad here in town. All make sense, but what has happened in a number of occasions and far more than we like to talk about is that there are. The bad guys or people who don't like their neighbor and call in hoaxes. Okay. Yeah. Yeah, exactly. So there here's an example in Wichita, Kansas, this happened a couple of years back where a man had been arrested after allegedly swatting prank led police to shoot dead 28 year old man. So this guy, 28 years old, Wichita, Kansas, please surrounded his home. After they received a hoax emergency call from a man claiming to have shot dead his father and taken his family hostage. And this call apparently stemmed from a kind of a battle between two online gamers playing call of duty online. The way these games work is you can talk back and forth. You can have. Teams and you or your team members can be from almost anywhere around the world. And you sitting there with headphones on and talking back and forth. You've got these teams and in some cases, this is just one person against another. And apparently they believe the report was an act of swatting where. Somebody makes a false report to a police department that causes the police to respond with a SWAT team. Now the audio of this emergency calls been made public, a man can be heard telling the authorities. This is according to the BBC that he had shot his father in the head and claimed to have taken his mother and siblings hostage. The color also said he had a handgun at had poured fuel over the house and wanted to set the property on fire. Sounds like the perfect thing for. A SWAT team to come to. Please say they surrounded the address. They called her given and we're preparing to make contact with the suspect reportedly inside. When Mr. Finch came to the door, they said one round was released by the officers after the 28 year old failed to comply with verbal orders to keep his hands up. Why would he, what did he done wrong? Obviously. The police ordered you to put your hands up. You probably should put your hands up. And they said he appeared to move his hands towards his waist multiple times when she probably did. Please say Mr. Finch was late found to be unarmed and was pronounced dead at a local hospital. A search found four of his family members inside. None of them dead. Injured North taken hostage. His family told local media, he was not involved in online. Gaming. Gaming is a little different than the call of duty and stuff. Gaming typically is gambling. Now we're finding that the, that hackers are out there who do this swatting maneuver on somebody. And then they have the hacked ring camera at that house and they watch the SWAT team respond. Can you believe that? And the FBI is saying that this is the latest twist on the swatting prank, some prank, right? Because victims had reused passwords from other services when setting up their smart devices. How many times do I have to warn about this? My buddy, I was just telling you guys about a couple of weeks ago, he's done that his. His revenue, his pay from the work he was doing, delivering food to people's homes was stolen by a hacker because he was using the same email address. Yes. To log in and the same password as had been stolen before. Absolutely incredible. There's also been reports of security flaws in some products, including the smart doorbells have allowed hackers to steal pet network passwords, et cetera. In one case in Virginia. Police reported hearing the hacker shout helped me after arriving at the home of a person they had fought might be about to kill himself. That's swatting that using technology you've brought into your home, it causes death, many examples of that, and we're still reusing passwords. Give me a break. We were busy trying to defend the election this year and had the, what did they call it? The most secure election in history, which baffles me. But anyway our businesses and government got broken thats what we're going to talk about right now. Let's get into our big problem here this week. And this has been continuing for what now about two or three weeks we've known about it? This is a hack of a company called SolarWinds. This hack apparently allowed intruders into our networks for maybe a year and a half. But certainly since March of 2019, this is. A huge deal. We're going to explain a little bit about that here. Who got hacked? What does it mean to you there? And I'm going to get into it just a little bit of something simple. It could be, haven't been done, right? That I have been advising you guys to do for a long time. Does this, like earlier I mentioned, Hey, change your passwords, use different passwords. And in fact, That's a big problem still, but we'll talk about this right now. SolarWindss is a company that makes tools to manage networks of computers and the network devices themselves. And my company mainstream was a client of SolarWindss. Sorry. I want to put that on the table. However, about a year and a half to two years ago, it's probably been about two years. We dropped SolarWindss as a vendor, and the reason we dropped them and we made it very clear to them was we had found security. Vulnerabilities in their architecture, the way they were doing things. We reported these security vulnerabilities to SolarWindss a couple of years ago, and they wouldn't do anything about it. So we said goodbye, and we dropped them as a vendor. Yeah, we were customer SolarWindss. We were using their stuff, but then we abandoned them when they wouldn't follow what we considered to be basic security guidelines. It turns out they weren't and we got it as a country. This has been called the Pearl Harbor of American information technology. Because the data within these hack networks, which included things like user IDs, passwords, financial records, source code can presumed now to being the hand of Russian intelligence agent. This is from. The United States of America's main security guide general Paul NACA sewn. It's just incredible what he's admitting here. He said SolarWindss, that company that the hackers used as a conduit for their attacks had a history of lackluster security for its products. What did I tell you, making it an easy target interviews with current and former employees suggest it was slow to make security a priority even as its software was adopted by federal agencies expert note that our experts noted that it took days after the Russian attack was discovered before SolarWindss websites stopped offering client the compromised programs. Microsoft by the way said that it had not been breached and initially here, but now this week it discovered it had been breached and resellers of Microsoft software had been breached to, and we've got intelligence officials now very upset about Microsoft not detecting it. It's just absolutely incredible here. This wasn't something like we had with Pearl Harbor, but this attack may prove to be even more damaging to our national security and our business prosperity. This is really fast. I love the fact. I'm not going to say I told you because I, I didn't tell you guys this, but I do love the fact that I was right again. How unfortunately I'm right too often when it comes to security and it is very frustrating to me to work with some clients that just don't seem to care about security. And I want to jump to an opinion piece here from our friends over at CNN. This is an opinion piece by Bruce. Schneider. You've probably seen him before. He is also, I think he writes for the Washington post. But remember when this came out the word about the SolarWindss hack, president Joe Biden said we're going to retaliate which I don't know that makes a whole lot of sense in this particular case for a number of reasons. Not the least of which we're not a hundred percent sure it's the Russians, but how are we going to retaliate? Cyber espionage is frankly business as usual for every country, not just the North Korea, Iran, Russia, China, and Vietnam. It's business as usual by us as well. And that it States is very aggressive offensively. In other words, going out after other countries in the cyber security realm. And we benefit from the lack of norms that are in cybersecurity, but here's what I really liked. The Bruce said. And I agree with entirely. I'm glad he must listen to the show. The fundamental problem is one of economic incentives. The market rewards, quick development of products. It rewards new features. It rewards spine on customers, end users collecting and selling individual data. Think of Facebook when we're saying this, our Instagram or any of these services that we're using all the time. So back to the quote here, the market does not reward security, safety, or transparency. It doesn't reward reliability past a bare minimum, and it does not reward resilient at all. And this is what happened with SolarWinds. SolarWindss ended up contracting software development to Eastern Europe where Russia has a lot more influence and Russia could easily subvert programmers over there. It's cheaper for Russia, not just for SolarWinds short-term profit. That's what they were after here was totally prioritized over product security, and yet their product is used to help secure. It just drives me crazy out there. Just absolutely crazy what some people are doing. I read a little quote down. I'm looking here to see if I've got it handy on my desk and I just don't see it. But they are prioritizing everything except. Security. And that is, I think, frankly, completely in excusable, right. Inexcusable. So this is happening with SolarWindss right now, but it's going to be happening with other places out there. We have probably 250 federal government agencies that were nailed by this. Can you imagine that? The man who owned SolarWindss is a Puerto Rican born billionaire named Orlando Bravo. His business model is to buy niche software companies, combine them with competitors, offshore work, cut any cost he can and raise prices. The same swapping corrupt practices that allowed this massive cybersecurity hack made Bravo a billionaire. Another quote here. This is from tech beacon. Hey, this is just crazy. Okay. So we know. Okay. I've established it. Craig, stop the stop. The monotonous. Okay. But I got to mention, we've got the U S treasury department was hacked the U S department of Commerce's national telecommunication infrastructure administration, department of health, national institutes of health, cyber security, and infrastructure. Agenc
Intro Randy discusses what he believes to be the best way to get your product or service up and running over the internet. Announcements • Relating to this episode, I have launched my own products and services on my own. • The Video stream portion of the podcast, as you may have noticed, is not every week. Think of it as more of a treat - where you don't see my face every moment! I don't want to see my face that much. It starts with WordPress - Sort of. • First really just need your domain name and webhosting (and of course an eMail host such as Microsoft 365 that I've now mentioned on quite a few episodes of the Manly Hanley Podcast). ○ I recommend to go with a host such as GoDaddy, Bluehost or HostGator ○ All of these hosts will offer some sort of C Panel that makes it super simple to install WordPress on your webserver. § The reason I mention creating your own domain with your WordPress install is because it gives you more control □ For instance, you could sign up directly through WordPress.com, and have them host it for you. But if you decide later that you don't like WordPress, it's not going to be as easy to switch to another platform since you're hosting by them ® The beauty of the WordPress platform is that they allow you to install it on your own web server They describe it in detail on their site, but I've copied and pasted into my notes here so I can just read it for you. However, the link is in the show notes. - https://wordpress.org/about/ - They call it their "WordPress Bill of Rights". I love it. Totally optional Step! - Setup a Ticketing System • Why use a ticketing system when I can just use my email? Because email sucks for efficiency in my opinion. Think of a ticketing system as a great way to centralize the your solutions to peoples' issues that you're hired to solve. Sure, you can search your email box and pull up the email thread, but it's way slower and less-efficient than a ticketing system that's designed to support users, report their issues/metrics, and automate common problems. A ticketing system offers a transparent view of what's happening (like a big picture) for your company, to see where the ball is being dropped, and what you can do as that company to improve things. • I've used numerous ticketing systems and I find Freshdesk to be the best one, as far as customization and reporting. Start Adding (needed) Plugins to Your WordPress Site • Now that you've figured out how you're going to support your users, you can plug those components into your WordPress setup. ○ WordPress is so popular, that it's very-likely that plugin exists for the software that you're wanting to use to support your customers. ○ For instance, I mentioned Freshdesk official widget that you can find in the plugins section of your WordPress site. The plugin is so easy to configure, it'll probably just take you a couple of minutes. Link: https://wordpress.org/plugins/freshdesk-support/ § Once I had the plugin installed and filled out the info, a floating widget appeared on my website, that will all me to provide instant support to a user that requests it. WooCommerce is probably the easiest way to build a customizable payment system (on your own site) that I've ever seen. WooCommerce brands itself as "an eCommerce toolkit that helps you sell anything. Beautifully.". Their description makes them sound a little Apple like. I can make any product and call it beautiful. The way I played that drum beat before the chorus, it was beautifully-executed. This iPhone is a beautiful rectangle. No. .. Flowers are beautiful, don't push it. I'd like to thank you for putting time aside to listen to the podcast.
This iPhone gave us the most enjoyable ASMR sounds, and they hopefully gave you some great tingles as well! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ia-taor/message
No matter what age you are, it's likely that you have fond memories of comics and comic books.Most of us are not so immersed in the comic culture that we'll get dressed up and go to Comic-Con, but you can re-ignite the nostalgia with the Comic Studio app from Seedlings.This iPhone app makes it really simple to make yourself, your children or your friends and family the hero in their very own comic book..It can use any picture you already have on your phone to get things started by removing the background and adding costumes and props to the story.Just like in the comics, you use thought or speech bubbles along with words like POW and KABAAAM to create action effects.To complete the story, you add a cool background and the legend is born!You don't have to be a comic book fanatic to enjoy this app, as it's great for communicating lots of things in a really amusing fashion.Check it out at https://www.seedling.com/comic
Buy iPhone 8 Black iPhone 8 For Sale -- Buy iPhone 8 Black color at any of our stores. The features this phone has got is really cool to say the least. This iPhone 8 comes with a 64gb of storage space in it and it is also fully unlocked so you have flexibility with the phone as well. The price of this iPhone 8 for sale is $425 and it's located at our helpertech Burnsville location and we can have it at our other store location as well if that's closer to you. Just so you know, any other phone or tablet you're looking for can also be gotten from any of our stores as well. This iPhone 8 for sale is fully up to date and also comes with a new battery, a new screen with a glass protector on it. Visit our store today to order your iPhone 8.
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The Internet Trends Report. Craig discusses some of the interesting things that you will discover in reading through this report. What's up with Android users doing updates and patches. Craig tells you about a study that showed 90% of Android users do not update or patch their devices -- 90% WOW!! What Browser are you using? Craig explains why Chrome is probably not your best choice if you are worried about privacy and security he tells you his choice for browsers. Whats the matter with checking your phone everytime it beeps? Listen in as Craig talks about a study that indicates that interruptions from our smartphone are affecting our brain chemistry. Owning cryptocurrency Can affect your employment. Craig explains why the Federal Government is taking a long look at those who own Cryptocurrencies and have a security clearance for their jobs. Autophagy and intermittent fasting. Craig discusses a study by Nobel Prize winner Jason Phung and his research and how intermittent fasting has changed Craigs life. Craig is putting up a new membership site (Yes, it is free you just have to sign up) On it will have all his special reports that he puts out and you will be the first to get them. These and more tech tips, news, and updates visit - CraigPeterson.com --- Transcript: Below is a rush transcript of this segment, it might contain errors. Airing date: 06/09/2018 Don't Use Android, Switch Browsers, and Smartphone Intrruptions Craig Peterson: [00:00:00] Hi everybody, Craig Peterson here, With a fan going on me as it is a little hot today. So, I apologize for some of the background noise and I'm a little clogged up also, just allergic to something. Just this time of year. We're going to be talking today about a couple of things to do with cryptocurrency. We're going to get into addiction and I wanted to get to last week as well as Autophagy thing. This guy Dr. Jason Phung won a Nobel Prize a couple of years ago and I've got to tell you what he found has already changed my life, so I'll tell you about that as far as my health goes. And it was really quite surprising to me. Goodbye Chrome. When you talk about why, we've got at least one guy who is leaving chrome and where he's moving to. Smartphones, they are impacting our brain chemistry. Cannon, Oh my gosh. Remember the Cannon EOS, Well, they stopped making them in 2010 and they just ran out of inventory. So, that's it that's the end of an 80-year history of film cameras for Canon. Wow. And, I want to get to Mary Meeker. She's just amazing. She's got her new internet trends report out. I just printed it up. I printed four pages per sheet. This thing is huge it's hundreds of pages long. Almost 300 or I think little over 300 pages. So, we'll talk about what she's seeing for trends in the Internet and of course a whole lot more stick around. Here we go. [00:01:49] On the front lines and ahead of the trends in business and consumer technology speaking with the top minds and creators behind the products and ideas that help to drive our everyday lives. [00:01:59] Dean Kamen is joining us now. He's the inventor of the Segway and the founder of us first Steve Forbes appreciate what you can do with Forbes magazine for all these years. It's one of my first go to places you can't talk right now with the guys and gals. Siri right now by the director of technology we're joined right now by the CEO of E-bates Kevin Johnson on air for more than 15 years. Over 20 million downloads [00:02:27] This is tech talk with Craig Peterson. [00:02:32] All right let's get going. Not a whole lot of time. It's hard trying to squeeze this into half an hour, it has been crazy. OK, so everybody should now have their Log-ins for my membership site everyone who asked who is having problems with this whole router update. This whole FBI thing. If you haven't received it let me know. But we were busy this week making sure we gave free account to the listeners who were having troubles who wanted to know more about the routers what models are affected maybe what they should do. We're going to be putting more of that together over the next week. Expect us to come out with something about. OK so now you can reboot is a router for two weeks now. So, what should you replace it with. And by the way you should have rebooted it twice if you do it once per week which is a minimum recommended by the FBI. So, we're putting together something I'm going to try and do a little probably not a Facebook Live, just so many of you guys just aren't listening aren't on Facebook because of frankly good reasons. So, we're probably going to do webinars or we'll do it similar to the last web before we had and kind of go through what your options are what you should do if your business how you can move away from these cheap home routers you don't want to use them now. [00:04:03] It's just amazing to me that people are still doing it. So, if you still have questions about this or anything frankly you can always text me 8 5 5 3 8 5 fifty five fifty three to get a hold of me. Well, let's get into Mary Meeker's report. She comes out with this Internet trend report every year and the market pays major attention to her. Kleiner Perkins is the company that she works for. And they've got a lot of very cool data in this it just came out the end of May in fact May 30th. So, she is looking at the trends overall of course growth is continuing but is continuing to slow. Now I'm looking at the stats here comparing smartphone unit shipments Android, iOS, and other and year to year growth. And basically, we have leveled out here with about one and a half billion smartphones a year. Now think about that if you're a business person or even if you're running the local soccer teams Web site you've got to seriously consider what people are watching what they're looking at. And another statistic that's in here is that now more than 50 percent of the Internet users are using these smartphone devices. [00:05:23] It's just incredible. So, this year we had 7 percent growth versus 12 percent growth last year and our global Internet users we are now more than 50 per cent saturated. In other words, 50 more than 50 percent of every person worldwide has access to the Internet. Now that's a pretty big number. What that means is from a growth standpoint maintaining growth is going to be difficult, but growth still does remain solid. We've got more innovation more competition frankly, you can find all of this report I got it posted a link to it anyways up on my Web site at CraigPeterson.com, WI-FI adoption online payment. This thing goes on and on. She's done a great job here looking to better experience for consumers and video music. The news feeds it is just amazing. So something you should look at if you are an Internet marketer if you are doing anything Internet frankly so have a look at that. Mary Meeker. OK so let's talk about some of these devices. Let's talk about the Android smart devices because here's some statistics that I thought were probably happening and now it's getting confirmed. Yes indeed. Android devices turned out and this is a great article on cyber scoop by Patrick O'Neill. [00:06:59] Turns out, no one is updating their Android devices, and what have I said about Android for a long time. One is they are more susceptible to hacking than iOS is for quite a number of reasons. The hardware in Android is not as good as the hardware you're going to find in an iPhone. But in addition to that, the biggest problem people have with Android devices is keeping them up to date, most of the manufacturers and remember we're not just talking about the guys that make the phone. We're talking about the companies that are using the phone and are distributing them that are selling them to end users because each one of these carriers is going to have some changes at least to the software in those devices. So, what it's time for a new update when Google comes out with a new version of Android. It might not ever, ever, be available for your Android device. So, when you go back to the standard recommendation of patch early and patch often. You can do it even if you want to. OK. Duel security just came out with the stats here. They released a study about a week ago that found that 90 per cent, nine zero percent of over 10 million Android devices across the U.S. and Western Europe are running outdated versions of Android, 90 percent. And remember New versions of Android aren't just giving you some new features. They aren't just making things cooler, looking nicer. Right. With all those wonderful new little icons and logos and things. No, they are closing security holes, 90 percent of devices not patched up to date is a significant gap. So, you take my advice if you can afford an iPhone you're wrong because if you can afford an android device you can afford an iPhone. [00:09:11] Now you don't have to buy the latest, greatest iPhone right. This iPhone 10 that cost a thousand or more dollars depending on what you get on it. You don't have to get that device. All you have to do is get maybe an iPhone 6S. For instance, there are still for sale 6 s plus maybe. Still for sale and now they're cheap. They're about the same price as an Android phone. Many of the carriers if you up your contract with them they will just go ahead and flat out give you one of these older phones and the iPhone's are easy, peasy, to keep up to date. Apple puts out security patches for the iPhone for years. And years. Unlike many of the Android devices and so, the updates you get an android often they're kind of haphazard, if you even get them at all and attackers are taking advantage of this. We've got new malware brand new malware popping up that preys on old Android software and hardware. OK. So, Apple is dolling out patches to the App Store. There just isn't the same thing for Google Play and that's because there isn't just one Android phone. There are more than 1000 models. Compare that to Apple that only has to deal with a few dozen. And you can begin to understand why Apple can keep their software patched up and Google cannot, remember this isn't really Google's problem. This is really a problem of the carriers and the phone manufacturers not taking the Google updates and being able to get them out to you. [00:11:00] OK, now Duo also found that computers are often left behind and Wes's operating systems 74 percent of Macs and 85 percent of Chrome OS machines are not running the latest software. And that's a travesty. Now it's not so bad necessarily with Apple because even if you're not running the latest operating system they provide security patches for the last couple of operating systems, OK, so it's not too, too, bad. But when we’re talking about Google's chromos it's a bit of a problem. It's really weird too when you look at the ChromeOS from Google which is on these inexpensive typically inexpensive laptops. These machines auto update on every restart. So, it's really weird but chromos is widely hair hailed frankly as one of the most secure really computing environments out there today. So, some of these stats may not tell the whole story but again if you can make sure you ditch your Android device and ditch it quick and get yourself an iPhone or an iPad. Don't worry about the latest model. You don't need it to stay up to date. You need something recent. If you can afford an iPhone 7 or 8 or 10 go for it. But if all you can afford is that six that are still supported I would I would not get anything older than a 6S which is kind of Apple does this half and half right. They do a six and then come out sometime later with a success then they'll do just the seven then the seven-S OK, so try and get the second half of the six that's S series whether it be the big one or the small one. [00:12:54] All right so let's talk about Chrome Google Chrome. You know I've been on Google earlier for Android now and again remember it's not so much Google it's the people that are using the Android software that are making the phones that are selling you the phones etcetera. Right. So, we're not going to just completely blame Google for this one. [00:13:16] So or not I'm not trying to be nasty about it but here is the bottom line. We know Google has been really big over the years on monitoring everything that we have to say right. You know that it's pretty straightforward. I think pretty much everybody knows that. Right. I'm not crazy here. Google's business is keeping an eye on you and your business right. OK so we're on the same page here. If you are using google chrome and heck I use Google Chrome right. A lot of people do because there are great plugins for it works well. It's relatively fast. Well you know I don't. Are you sick of hearing about data privacy, now. But listen here, in the U.S. there's very little you can do about these big businesses keeping tabs on you. The big business is watching where you're going online what you're buying what you're interested in right. So, they can bring up this ad or that ad. This is a real problem. So how much information do you want to give Google. I was just looking today, at my information that Google holds. You can go in you can customize it you can say I don't want to track where I'm going. Where all my searches are, but there's a lot of options and I advise you to do that you should go in. You should customize your security settings. But the bottom line is they are going to record stuff whether you want them to or not. Now if you live in California you have some options, if you live in Europe you have some options, because of the laws that are there. [00:15:08] The rest of us have to look at this seriously and try and figure out what the right way to go is. We've got Cambridge Analytica the personal data of more than 50 million Americans are in their hand. The Obama campaign the personal information of over 1 billion people in their hands. We've watched companies shut down their European branches because of Europe's data privacy regulations. We've seen companies block Europeans from even gaining access to their Web sites. And when you look at the number of breaches that have happened over the last few years it's just going to make your head spin. So, what can you do. Well we've talked about a couple of things before. Duck Duck Go. That's my default search engine. And you just go to my Web site. CraigPeterson.com you can look it up right there. There's a search function right on there. But Duck Duck Go, doesn't keep any information on you. We have the founder of Epic. On our show here. Couple of years back and that's a browser epic browser dot com and it doesn't keep any information on you. But it is based on the Google Code. But they've gone in and they've removed some of those functions. Google has been there to track you. So, what should be the default browser for you. And it's a question only you can answer. You know I use Chrome for some things I use safari on my Mac for other things use Firefox frequently on my devices as well including on my smartphone. [00:16:56] I use Firefox, but Chrome has 60 percent of the browser market and Firefox has about 10. Now Firefox has a whole new version of their browser out there now. It is designed to be fast and it's designed to be secure from a. I'm not going to let people steal your information standpoint right. So basically. You want to ditch the browser that supporting a company that uses the data it's gathered about you to sell advertisements right as well as allowing companies to track your movements online. Because just how much privacy do you really think Google is going to give you. Now Firefox's parent company that's Mozilla. It's a nonprofit. They, in fact, I would say they're a little how what's the right word there. They're kind of crazy about some of the security and whether or not they should use this version of open source software open source software or not use it. Right. But they're saying over at Mozilla that the Firefox browser the new one is designed with privacy and convenience. In fact, they say right on the site that Firefox proves that privacy and convenience don't have to be mutually exclusive. And you know I agree, about that with them frankly. So, I agree that you shouldn't be sharing all of this data. I agree you shouldn't be using Chrome, in many cases right. I love having a fast browser and out of the box. Firefox has privacy turned on with Google Chrome you have to go in you have to know what you're doing and you have to configure it. [00:18:53] So, let's just leave it at that. OK. They've got this do not track tag that's available in Firefox now. Not every site is going to honor that. But they really are trying to get privacy and get it out to you. The end user. OK so let's move on to the next. We don't have much time here. We only have about five minutes left. I want to remind you that if you're still questioning your router and what you should be doing, I am going to be doing a webinar for you. So, you have to keep an eye out if you want to know about that. If you have any questions about your router it particularly if your business and you wonder if there is an alternative that isn't going to break the bank reach out to me I'm putting this stuff together it takes a little while. Hopefully within the next week I'll have that out and available and we'll be able to chat in the online space in a live webinar. Answer your questions. But until then you can just text me 8 5 5 3 8 5 fifty-five fifty-three we'll get you the information we've been for people that qualify that are trying to figure out what to do but haven't been able to will even send you. We'll create and send you your own log-in to my membership site for free so that you can get all of that information. So, we'll do that for you. [00:20:26] But you got to reach out 8 5 5 3 8 5 55 53. [00:20:31] Interesting study that came out and it was talking about constant interruptions from alerts and messages on your smartphone. And what's been interesting about this is they've been going further than just how long does it take you to get back into that train of thought. Have you noticed that when you get interrupted by anyone or anything it can take quite a while to get back to the original train of thought. I know with me when on trying to figure out something and I am sitting there working in particular. I'm trying to program or I'm trying to write something I have the stream of consciousness and someone interrupts me. I've lost a minimum of ten minutes sometimes more than half an hour to try and get back into that flow again interrupting me. To me is extremely painful. I just really hate it. So, when I saw this study I thought wow now this is interesting. Very, very, interesting. This is from CBS local affiliates an affiliate down in Philadelphia but they're talking about this whole thing Dr. Scott B. He's a psychologist over at Cleveland Clinic. He says there's this phenomenon they call switch cost that when there's an interruption we switch away from the task that we were at and then we have to come on back. We think it interrupts our efficiency with our brains by 40 percent. He says our nose is always getting off the grindstone. Then we have to reorient. Ourselves. And they're saying that when you do get that interrupt people get little surges of stress hormone, cortisol, which we've heard of before it causes the heart rate to jump. [00:22:14] Some people get sweaty hands and muscles can get tight. So, bottom line they're advising. Put that phone away. Right. If you're getting the interruptions I have mine on silent-mode most of the time I don't even know it's going off right. I check, I poll every once in a while when I need a little bit of a break. I check and see are there any messages any phone calls I have to return. So, he goes on to say initially when you start trying to stay away from technology or confine it you'll be a little uncomfortable. You'll have that fear of missing out or a little anxiety that something is getting past you. But with practice he says your brain can get used to it. So, break the habit. You don't have to carry that phone around with you all of the time. You don't have to be constantly checking. There are some symptoms to this. If you wake up in the morning the first thing you do is get on your phone. You've got a problem. If the last thing you do at night before you go to sleep is check your phone. You've got a problem. It really interesting article you find up on my Web site. And there have been many other articles that are similar to that. [00:23:25] You have to disconnect. Read a book even watch a little bit of TV. I promise I talk about Krypto we've only got about a minute left. We had two different things one if you have a security clearance, you might want to listen to this, because at this point they're saying that owning a cryptocurrency could cause you a problem if you're trying to get a security clearance and I can see why. Absolutely see why. And man, I wish we had time to do this. Maybe we should do kind of a whole show on this, but this guy won the Nobel Prize back and I think it was 2016. Dr. Jason Phung and he was talking about Autophagy where cells repair themselves in your body. Know what stops them from repairing themselves. Eating. So, what's interesting is if you know me you know I've been doing intermittent fasting. So, what Basically what he found and won a Nobel Prize for is if you do intermittent fasting you will be healthier. Really interesting article you'll find it at Craig Peterson dot com. There's a ton of information I've read five books on this so far just fascinating and personally I can say it works. Have any questions. Text me 8 5 5 3 8 5 55 53. Make sure we answer you and visit me online as well. Craig Peterson dot com have a great weekend. We'll be talking again soon. Bye-Bye. --- Related articles: That Russian malware that infected over 500,000 devices is even worse than we thought US: Crypto Could Pose a Problem for Candidates Seeking Security Clearances The FBI calls Chinese spies in the US a ‘whole of society threat’ — here’s how to protect yourself HIPAA Security Rule Requires Physical Security of Equipment IBM bans the use of removable storage by employees 5G Wireless Service Is Coming, And So Are Health Concerns Over The Towers That Support It No one is updating their Android devices, new data shows Bye, Chrome: Why I’m switching to Firefox and you should too Constant Interruptions From Smartphone Can Impact Brain Chemistry, Scientists Say Canon shutters 80-year history of film cameras How to renew your body: Fasting and autophagy Here’s Mary Meeker’s essential 2018 Internet Trends report More stories and tech updates at: www.craigpeterson.com Don't miss an episode from Craig. Subscribe and give us a rating: www.craigpeterson.com/itunes Message Input: Message #techtalk Follow me on Twitter for the latest in tech at: www.twitter.com/craigpeterson For questions, call or text: 855-385-5553
Groundbreaking director Steven Soderbergh uncovers a new classification in the DSM-V: unsane! This iPhone-shot psych horror was an enjoyable trip, despite there being some crrrrazy plot holes! Claire Foy wrestles admirably with an inconsistent North Atlantic accent while Andrew's buddy Zach Cherry digs deep to play a no-nonsense nurse. What is real and what is imaginary? To learn more about this topic, watch Phil's series of video essays: I'll Believe It When I See It! Check out this episode!You can download the podcast here by right-clicking on the hypertext link and choosing "save as", or you can use the convenient player attached to this post.
Groundbreaking director Steven Soderbergh uncovers a new classification in the DSM-V: unsane! This iPhone-shot psych horror was an enjoyable trip, despite there being some crrrrazy plot holes! Claire Foy wrestles admirably with an inconsistent North Atlantic accent while Andrew's buddy Zach Cherry digs deep to play a no-nonsense nurse. What is real and what is imaginary? To learn more about this topic, watch Phil's series of video essays: I'll Believe It When I See It!
@JoeKBraswell and @AkiliShine discuss tech & geek news on BHL's Geek. Nerd. Tech! Today's stories: TECH + POLITICS • ‘A Day Without Women’ strike • US to suspend H1-B visas for high-skilled workers in tech industry • Wikileaks: The CIA is using TV’s, Smartphone’s and cars to spy on their owners TECH • Microsoft urges girls to stay in STEM, and change the world #MakeWhatsNext • Violence on Facebook Live presents censorship dilemma • Jeff Bezos scores a first paying customer for his growing space company • Uber used a secret tool, extraordinary measures to sidestep government officials • Mymanu Cilk earphones capable of translating in real time • This iPhone 8 feature will change everything GEEK • ‘Logan’ Review • Enter Bjork’s imagination at LA Debut of singers VR exhibit • Nintendo Switch is the fastest-selling Nintendo console in the Americas and Europe • There’s a hidd
The iPhone application BUZZflies detects sounds from other iPhone devices and synchronizes them utilizing a synchronization algorithm inspired from the nature: the firefly synchronization algorithm. After the iPhone devices are synchronized they will play a song of your choice from your library. This iPhone application is a demonstration of simple distributed scheme based on the theory of pulse coupled oscillators. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Rx2THU3daM&list=PLB18oUigs4QCaBg2k20Zp6pGQd2Nsz-wg&index=3 Go for the free application BUZZflies on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/at/app/buzzflies/id402295450?mt=8
The iPhone application BUZZflies detects sounds from other iPhone devices and synchronizes them utilizing a synchronization algorithm inspired from the nature: the firefly synchronization algorithm. After the iPhone devices are synchronized they will play a song of your choice from your library. This iPhone application is a demonstration of simple distributed scheme based on the theory of pulse coupled oscillators. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Rx2THU3daM&list=PLB18oUigs4QCaBg2k20Zp6pGQd2Nsz-wg&index=3 Go for the free application BUZZflies on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/at/app/buzzflies/id402295450?mt=8
The shown iPhone application detects sounds from other iPhone devices and synchronizes them utilizing an synchronization algorithm inspired from the nature: the firefly synchronization algorithm. This iPhone application is a demonstration of simple distributed scheme based on the theory of pulse coupled oscillators. Further activities and research results can be found here.
The shown iPhone application detects sounds from other iPhone devices and synchronizes them utilizing an synchronization algorithm inspired from the nature: the firefly synchronization algorithm. This iPhone application is a demonstration of simple distributed scheme based on the theory of pulse coupled oscillators. Further activities and research results can be found here.