FTC Issues $5.6M in Refunds to Customers After Ring Privacy Settlement

The refunds will be made to individual affected customers through thousands of PayPal payments, available to be redeemed for a limited time.

darkreading – ​Read More

Chinese Keyboard Apps Open 1B People to Eavesdropping

Eight out of nine apps that people use to input Chinese characters into mobile devices have weakness that allow a passive eavesdropper to collect keystroke data.

darkreading – ​Read More

AeroNet Wireless Launches 10Gbps Internet Plan: A Landmark Moment in Puerto Rico’s Telecommunications Industry

By cybernewswire

San Juan, Puerto Rico, April 25th, 2024, CyberNewsWire The telecom company AeroNet Wireless announced the launch of its…

This is a post from HackRead.com Read the original post: AeroNet Wireless Launches 10Gbps Internet Plan: A Landmark Moment in Puerto Rico’s Telecommunications Industry

Hackread – Latest Cybersecurity, Tech, Crypto & Hacking News – ​Read More

The Biggest 2024 Elections Threat: Kitchen-Sink Attack Chains

Hackers can influence voters with media and breach campaigns, or try tampering with votes. Or they can combine these tactics to even greater effect.

darkreading – ​Read More

These SMBs are hot threat targets but they’re shrugging off security help

Grants are available to offset deployment costs, yet cybersecurity tools remain low in demand among the smaller companies that need them most.

Latest stories for ZDNET in Security – ​Read More

Godfather Banking Trojan Spawns 1.2K Samples Across 57 Countries

Mobile malware-as-a-service operators are upping their game by automatically churning out hundreds of unique samples on a whim.

darkreading – ​Read More

North Korea’s Lazarus Group Deploys New Kaolin RAT via Fake Job Lures

The North Korea-linked threat actor known as Lazarus Group employed its time-tested fabricated job lures to deliver a new remote access trojan called Kaolin RAT.
The malware could, “aside from standard RAT functionality, change the last write timestamp of a selected file and load any received DLL binary from [command-and-control] server,” Avast security researcher Luigino

The Hacker News – ​Read More

Women in Cybersecurity: ISC2 Survey Shows Pay Gap and Benefits of Inclusive Teams

About 23% of security teams include women, ISC2 found in its Cybersecurity Workforce Study.

Security | TechRepublic – ​Read More

Digital Blitzkrieg: Unveiling Cyber-Logistics Warfare

Cyberattacks on logistics are becoming increasingly common, and the potential impact is enormous.

darkreading – ​Read More

Kaspersky Thin Client 2.0 update | Kaspersky official blog

Many companies have long since moved from the traditional workstation model to the virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI). VDI provides a number of advantages — one being better cybersecurity (not least because work data doesn’t leave corporate servers; it always lives in a virtual machine). However, despite a popular misconception, VDI alone doesn’t mean guaranteed security. It always matters how secure the endpoint device is that connects to the virtual workplace.

By and large, there are two options for using VDI. The first is to employ traditional workstations; the second is to use thin clients. Common advantages of a thin client include the following:

no moving parts: they don’t have active cooling systems or mechanical hard drives, which significantly increases the service life of the thin client (up to 7-10 years);
low energy consumption, which leads to direct savings;
lower price and cost of ownership (in comparation even with desktops and laptops for office work);
ease of maintenance and operation.

However, from our point of view, this isn’t the main advantage of using a thin client. Any workstation, be it a desktop PC or a laptop, must be provided with additional layers protection. And a thin client can be made secure as-is if its operating system is based on the secure-by-design principle. It’s precisely such an operating system — Kaspersky Thin Client 2.0 — that we propose to use in thin clients connected to virtual desktop infrastructure.

What is Kaspersky Thin Client, and what’s new in version 2.0?

Essentially, Kaspersky Thin Client 2.0 is an updated operating system for thin clients, created in accordance with our Cyber Immune approach; as such, it doesn’t require additional security measures. Kaspersky Thin Client is based on our KasperskyOS system, which minimizes the risk of its compromise even in the event of complex targeted attacks.

The updated Kaspersky Thin Client version 2.0 can connect to remote environments deployed on the Citrix Workspace platform and VMware Horizon infrastructure using HTML5 technology. Kaspersky Thin Client 2.0 also supports connection to individual business applications deployed on the Microsoft Remote Desktop Services infrastructure, Windows Server, and terminal servers running Windows 10/11.

Another key change in KTC 2.0 is the increase in performance. We managed to increase both the speed of application delivery and the speed of system updates (due to the compact size of the OS image). Now deployment time of thin clients under KTC 2.0 through automatic connection takes about two minutes.

You can learn more about the updated operating system for thin clients on the Kaspersky Thin Client page.

Kaspersky official blog – ​Read More