With his memoir, ‘Spare,’ which finally hit bookstores around the globe on Tuesday, Prince Harry cements his place as the world’s least predictable living royal — a chaos agent of the most interesting kind. The book is full of references that, out of c…
French parliament votes to make solar panels compulsory on large car parks
One of the key measures of the Acceleration of Renewable Energies bill, adopted on 10 January by the French National Assembly, will make compulsory the installation of solar panels on all car parks of over 1,500 square metres.
Predictions 2023, Part 1: What will the new year bring for the InfoSec Community?
By Diana-Lynn Contesti, CISSP-ISSAP, ISSMP, CSSLP, SSCP In recent years, we have seen the threat landscape become increasingly complex as threat actors use sophisticated techniques to exploit vulnerabilities of weak passwords, missing patches and antiquated software, thus gaining access to corporate networks. With attacks rising within industrial control systems (ICS), operating technologies (OT) and the internet of things (IoT), we are seeing the development of new terminologies emerge (e.g., patch lag or security resilience), and the list goes on. In 2023, we can expect to see the following: Staffing shortages because of the increased need to thwart cyberattacks and, as…
Proposed online streaming bill could discriminate against American firms: U.S. Embassy
The United States Embassy in Ottawa says it has concerns that the federal Liberals’ controversial online streaming act could discriminate against American companies.
Is an ‘open border’ to blame for America’s fentanyl crisis?
Republicans blame poor border security for America’s fentanyl crisis, but experts tell a different story. Richard Hall reports
2 Palestinians killed in West Bank raid, stabbing attack
Palestinian authorities say that two Palestinians were killed in separate violent confrontations with Israelis in the occupied West Bank
Crypto-inspired Magecart skimmer surfaces via digital crime haven
Back in the spring of 2020, an advert for a new skimmer was posted to a criminal forum. The product, called mr.SNIFFA, claims to have code that cannot be seen using browser tools and works across different browsers.