Not enough people are talking about this free Microsoft Office alternative with minimal AI
If you’re eyeing a new office suite that is locally installed and fully featured, Collabora runs on Linux, MacOS, and Windows.
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If you’re eyeing a new office suite that is locally installed and fully featured, Collabora runs on Linux, MacOS, and Windows.
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After a year of testing the top hardware and software, here’s ZDNET’s list of 2025 winners.
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Evidence shows that certain people have been targeted by malicious actors, often linked to governments or state-backed groups.
The post Apple and Google Alert Users Worldwide After New Spyware Activity Surfaces appeared first on TechRepublic.
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Get a select Samsung or Motorola phone at no upfront cost with a new Metro by T-Mobile line. We’ll break down the terms.
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Evidence suggests emerging technology is impacting the job market, but there are ways to ensure you’re prepared for the hit.
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Fraud is rising quickly in digital channels, making it harder for businesses to stay secure without adding customer friction. Deterministic, mobile-based identity signals provide the real-time, authoritative verification that outdated probabilistic tools can’t, enabling stronger fraud prevention with smoother onboarding.
The post Strengthening Fraud Prevention with Real-Time Mobile Identity Signals appeared first on TechRepublic.
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The Iranian hacking group known as MuddyWater has been observed leveraging a new backdoor dubbed UDPGangster that uses the User Datagram Protocol (UDP) for command-and-control (C2) purposes.
The cyber espionage activity targeted users in Turkey, Israel, and Azerbaijan, according to a report from Fortinet FortiGuard Labs.
“This malware enables remote control of compromised systems by allowing
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Elevation’s Tag Vault keychain and security cable will protect your AirTag from being easily detached from various things.
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I typically go for higher-end multitools, but the NexTool E1 stood out for its durable design and surprisingly accessible price.
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When I started my organization’s CMMC journey, I knew I was stepping into one of the most important projects of my career. As a Department of Defense subcontractor, our business depends heavily on contract awards from large prime contractors. When I learned that CMMC would roll out in phases, where certified companies receive priority in Phase 1 and non-certified organizations could be excluded entirely in Phase 2.
I committed myself to:
“I will not be responsible for putting this company out of business.”
That clarity of purpose fueled every decision I made. We ultimately succeeded, earning a CMMC Conditional Certification with only one POAM, and later achieving the full certification. But the journey wasn’t flawless. I am sharing what worked, what I would do differently, and how you can prepare for your own assessment.
One of the best decisions I made early on was completing the CCP training. I was not trying to become an auditor—I wanted to understand how auditors think.
The course gave me:
This foundation removed guesswork and let me structure our implementation around defensible, auditable evidence instead of assumptions.
Our Quality Manager (QM), who leads our AS9100 audits every year, gave us a plan that became the backbone of our preparation. It was simple, realistic, and highly effective:
Year-long audit readiness plan:
This phased approach made expectations clear and prevented surprises late in the journey.
We selected the same audit organization that handles our other certifications.
That mattered because:
Relationships matter in this process. Familiarity reduced friction and helped us avoid misunderstandings during evidence inspection.
We chose to implement the consultant’s findings ourselves rather than outsourcing every change. It wasn’t always fast—but it worked.
Benefits of the DIY approach:
Ironically, during our final assessment, we learned that our consultant’s other clients had more findings than we did. That validated our more hands-on approach.
I made it clear early on that the goal wasn’t a perfect 110 score.
The real objective was:
This mindset kept leadership aligned and supportive. When we earned a conditional certification with one POAM, they understood it was a success, not a failure.
I reported to an IT Manager who didn’t have enough organizational influence to push company-wide changes. I was four levels down from the CEO, yet responsible for implementing policies that affected the entire organization.
Without a champion at the director/VP/C-suite level:
If I could start over, I would secure an executive sponsor from day one. It would be someone who could clear resistance and endorse changes from the top.
Our leadership wanted the entire company to be certified instead of just the handful of employees who actually handle CUI. Looking back, this was one of our biggest inefficiencies.
The analogy I use is PCI compliance: Imagine certifying a 500-employee company for credit card handling when only 10 employees actually process payments. Now everyone—from custodians to executives—must take PCI training and follow PCI procedures.
That’s what we did with CMMC, and that added an excessive and unnecessary burden to everyone.
Yet, having a small, well-structured enclave would have:
I strongly recommend assessing whether your organization truly needs enterprise-wide certification—or if an enclave is the smarter path.
Leadership was anxious about whether we would pass, so they instructed the QM to audit all evidence during the final month before the assessment.
The result?
If I had involved the QM throughout the entire program, the evidence format would have been clean, consistent, and audit-ready from the start.
We earned a CMMC Conditional Certification with one POAM during the final assessment period.
We closed that POAM within five months and achieved full CMMC Certification.
This journey pushed me professionally and personally, and I’m proud of the outcome. The lessons above aren’t hypothetical: they’re battle-tested. If you’re preparing for your own assessment, I hope these insights help you navigate your path more efficiently and with fewer surprises.
CMMC is challenging, especially if you work for a small or mid-sized contractor. But with the right structure, the right people, and realistic expectations, it’s absolutely achievable.
If you’re getting ready for your final assessment:
And remember: the goal isn’t perfection—it’s certification.
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