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Five Eyes top agencies issue warning that Russian hackers are targeting the cloud — and the human factor is once again to blame
By Benedict Collins published
Russian-backed groups are jumping on the cloud, and compromised credentials are still the main form of access.

The White House urgently wants memory-safe programming languages to be used by developers
By Benedict Collins published
As the private sector takes on the mantle of cyber defense, the White House wants them to adopt memory-safe languages

Google ramps up its Microsoft criticism — a cloud war could be on the horizon
By Benedict Collins published
Microsoft and Amazon's share of the cloud market has come under scrutiny, and Google says it's time something was done

Nvidia CEO predicts the death of coding — Jensen Huang says AI will do the work, so kids don't need to learn
By Benedict Collins published
Forget Java and Python, any language is a coding language thanks to the power of AI, Nvidia CEO says.

PayPal patents new system to detect the theft of “super-cookies”
By Benedict Collins published
Hackers can steal super-cookies to access your accounts, but PayPal has a novel new method for protecting your accounts

Google CEO says that AI tips the scales in favor of defenders “disproportionately”
By Benedict Collins published
AI can work for both attackers and defenders, but who does it benefit more?

The Kremlin’s pursuit of winning its ‘special military operation’ knows no bounds, as Russia-linked group resorts to spamming Ukraine into submission
By Benedict Collins published
Forget Nigerian princes and romance scams, Russia thinks that phony Canadian pharmacies and pigeon risotto are the future of spam.

Cyberattacks are getting faster, more common and more successful, even though detection is more advanced than ever — new report signals the threats to businesses, supply chains, and democracy
By Benedict Collins published
CrowdStrike Global Threat Report for 2024 claims the threat landscape is not looking good for anyone.

US considering more than $10 billion in subsidies for Intel as part of CHIPS act to secure domestic semiconductor manufacturing
By Benedict Collins published
US reliance on overseas semiconductor production puts supply at risk, so urgent investments in domestic alternatives seems to be the best way forward.
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