Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Robert McMillan"


24 mentions found


Microsoft has been adding generative AI capabilities to much of its software and services. Microsoft Corp. patched a dangerous security issue in Bing last month just days before it launched a new artificial intelligence-powered version of the search engine. The problem was discovered by outside researchers at the security firm Wiz Inc. It was created by a mistake in the way that Microsoft configured applications on Azure, its cloud-computing platform, and could be used to gain access to emails and other documents of people who used Bing, the researchers said.
China has routinely denied hacking into businesses or governments in other countries. State-sponsored hackers from China have developed techniques that evade common cybersecurity tools and enable them to burrow into government and business networks and spy on victims for years without detection, researchers with Alphabet Inc.’s Google found. Over the past year, analysts at Google’s Mandiant division have discovered hacks of systems that aren’t typically the targets of cyber espionage. Instead of infiltrating systems behind the corporate firewall, they are compromising devices on the edge of the network—sometimes firewalls themselves—and targeting software built by companies such as VMware Inc. or Citrix Systems Inc. These products run on computers that don’t typically include antivirus or endpoint detection software.
Russia has targeted organizations in at least 17 European nations this year, Microsoft says. Russian government hackers have increased their cyber-espionage attacks against Ukraine and its allies in recent months while deploying novel strains of malicious software, according to research from Microsoft Corp. and other security companies. The findings reflect a renewed commitment by Moscow to conduct cyberattacks and suggest it may be preparing to launch more aggressive and potentially destructive ones to coincide with Russia’s expected spring offensive in eastern Ukraine. The shift follows a relative lull in cyber activity after an initial onslaught when the war began, Western officials and experts said.
A growing tribe of thrill seekers scan the local weather and wax up their boards when they hear that most enticing of forecasts: a big arctic storm blowing down from Canada. A portrait of Cole Barree after surfing in Lake Superior in Duluth, Minn., on Feb. 24.
DULUTH, Minn.—With local residents stocking up on emergency supplies and the National Weather Service warning of blizzardy gale-force winds last Thursday, Randy Carlson found himself looking for the perfect wave. Duluth is perhaps the most unexpected big-wave surf spot in the U.S.—especially during Minnesota’s punishing winters. Mr. Carlson is a member of a growing tribe of thrill-seekers who scan the local weather and wax up their boards when they hear that most enticing of forecasts: a big arctic storm blowing down from Canada.
Law-enforcement officials including Attorney General Merrick Garland, speaking, and Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco have been dedicating resources to thwarting cyberattacks. Extortion payments from ransomware, a hacking scourge that has crippled hospitals, schools and public infrastructure, fell significantly last year, according to federal officials, cybersecurity analysts and blockchain firms. After ballooning for years, the amount of money being paid to ransomware criminals dropped in 2022, as did the odds that a victim would pay the criminals who installed the ransomware. With ransomware, hackers lock up a victim’s computer network, encrypting hard drives until victims pay.
SAN FRANCISCO—A year ago, Adele Gower used to cherish daily 90-minute swims in the frigid Bay here. Now she can only stand it for 30 minutes. She abandoned her wetsuit after being shamed by fellow San Francisco Bay swimmers—a peculiar, zealous breed, who jump off boats near Alcatraz Island and swim with seals in the city’s Aquatic Park.
Apple Inc. is planning to significantly expand its data-encryption practices, a step that is likely to create tensions with law enforcement and governments around the world as the company continues to build new privacy protections for millions of iPhone users. The expanded end-to-end encryption system, an optional feature called Advanced Data Protection, would keep most of the iCloud’s data secure, even in the event that Apple is hacked. It would also prevent Apple from being able to provide data from iCloud phone backups in response to law-enforcement requests.
Locked out of Facebook or Instagram? It happens to a surprising number of people, often with maddening results. The reality, though, is that there aren’t many great options for getting an account restored once a user is locked out. Facebook’s parent company, Meta Platforms Inc., doesn’t have a customer-service line where any user can speak with representatives. The company, which has said it is committing to building out more customer-service options, advises people to use their guided tools, Facebook.com/hacked and Instagram.com/hacked, which ask a series of questions and then recommend various actions to secure the account.
Executives at Facebook parent Meta Platforms led a lengthy internal probe into abuse of a system that allows employees to help users regain control of their accounts. Meta Platforms Inc. has fired or disciplined more than two dozen employees and contractors over the last year whom it accused of improperly taking over user accounts, in some cases allegedly for bribes, according to people familiar with the matter and documents viewed by The Wall Street Journal. Some of those fired were contractors who worked as security guards stationed at Meta facilities and were given access to the Facebook parent’s internal mechanism for employees to help users having trouble with their accounts, according to the documents and people familiar with the matter.
Elon Musk told Twitter employees that the company needs roughly half of its revenue to come from subscriptions. Elon Musk ordered the end of remote work for most Twitter Inc. employees, in his first email to the whole company since taking over late last month. The memo came amid more turmoil in the senior ranks at the company, with Twitter’s chief information security officer departing. “There is no way to sugarcoat the message,” Mr. Musk wrote in the overnight email, according to a copy of the message viewed by The Wall Street Journal. “The economic picture ahead is dire, especially for a company like ours that is so dependent on advertising in a challenging economic climate.”
The executive tasked with policing content on Twitter Inc. might seem an unlikely ally for Elon Musk, a self-described free-speech absolutist. Yoel Roth , Twitter’s global head of safety and security, was maligned by critics a couple of years ago as the embodiment of the company’s alleged bias against conservative users, an issue Mr. Musk has vowed to address.
Elon Musk told Twitter employees that the company needs roughly half of its revenue to come from subscriptions. Elon Musk ordered the end of remote work for most Twitter Inc. employees as the departure of senior security and privacy executives from the company drew concern from federal regulators. “There is no way to sugarcoat the message,” Mr. Musk wrote in the overnight email, his first to the whole company, according to a copy of the message viewed by The Wall Street Journal. “The economic picture ahead is dire, especially for a company like ours that is so dependent on advertising in a challenging economic climate.”
Inside Twitter Inc. in the week after Elon Musk took it over, almost no one seemed to know for sure what was going on. As Mr. Musk opined and joked on the platform about possible product changes, the mood among many inside the company was anxious and grim, according to interviews with employees. The one thing that seemed certain to employees was that many of them would soon lose their jobs, they said.
Elon Musk’s Twitter Begins Layoffs
  + stars: | 2022-11-04 | by ( Alexa Corse | Robert Mcmillan | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Twitter Inc. has told employees it would notify them about head-count reductions on Friday, a move that comes about a week after billionaire Elon Musk acquired the social-media company. The company, in a message sent to staff on Thursday, didn’t spell out the extent of the cuts. Twitter had more than 7,500 employees at the start of this year, according to a regulatory filing.
Twitter Inc. has told employees it would notify them about head-count reductions on Friday, a move that comes about a week after billionaire Elon Musk acquired the social-media company. The company, in a message sent to staff on Thursday, didn’t spell out the extent of the cuts. Twitter had more than 7,500 employees at the start of this year, according to a regulatory filing.
Elon Musk has leveraged his diverse business empire in his first week owning Twitter Inc., blurring the line between the newly private social-media company and Tesla Inc., the electric-car maker he also runs. Tesla engineers were among the first outsiders to begin working on reshaping Twitter after Mr. Musk completed his $44 billion takeover a week ago, part of at least dozens of people added to an internal company directory, according to documents viewed by The Wall Street Journal. The list included some people who appear to work for the Boring Co., a tunneling business Mr. Musk founded.
Twitter had more than 7,500 employees at the start of this year. Twitter Inc. has told employees it would notify them about head-count reductions on Friday, a move that comes about a week after billionaire Elon Musk acquired the social-media company. The company, in a message sent to staff on Thursday, didn’t spell out the extent of the cuts. Twitter had more than 7,500 employees at the start of this year, according to a regulatory filing.
If you ever find yourself transferring money online, either to or on behalf of someone you’ve never met—stop, law-enforcement officials say. For years now, scammers have found that they can make millions of dollars conning people using a variety of online methods. So how to avoid being scammed? The bottom line, law-enforcement officials say, is that if you ever find yourself transferring money online, either to or on behalf of someone you’ve never met—stop. Even if you know who you’re sending the money to, talk to them via telephone before you send the funds.
The text message on Jane Yan’s mobile phone came from a number she didn’t recognize. “Are we going to the salon tonight?” It looked like the kind of mistake that can happen any day. In fact, it was part of a continuing scam that cost U.S. victims more than $429 million in losses last year, according to the Internet Crime Complaint Center, the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s clearinghouse for consumer complaints about online crime.
Harry Potter actor Robbie Coltrane dies aged 72
  + stars: | 2022-10-14 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
Actor Robbie Coltrane talks during a media preview of The Wizarding World of Harry Potter-Diagon Alley at the Universal Orlando Resort in Orlando, Florida June 19, 2014. REUTERS/David Manning/FilesLONDON, Oct 14 (Reuters) - Robbie Coltrane, the larger-than-life Scottish actor who played Hagrid in the Harry Potter films, died on Friday at the age of 72, his agent said. Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling led the tributes on Twitter, writing: "I'll never know anyone remotely like Robbie again. "Robbie Coltrane, Scottish entertainment legend - you will be hugely missed," she wrote. British actor and broadcaster Stephen Fry - who narrated the British version of the Harry Potter audio books - wrote that he had met Coltrane almost exactly 40 years ago.
A growing body of evidence suggests that pro-Russian hackers and online activists are working with the country’s military intelligence agency, according to researchers at Google. Western officials and security experts are interested in the possible Kremlin links because it would help explain Moscow’s intentions both inside and outside Ukraine despite recent military setbacks that prompted Russian President Vladimir Putin this week to announce a mobilization push.
Over the past year, some of the world’s biggest technology companies have been bested by an international group of hackers—some of them teenagers—whose motivations seem at times unusual, said security experts who have investigated the episodes. Uber Technologies said Monday that it was a victim of the group, called Lapsus$, saying it gained access to the company’s internal systems and posted messages, including a graphic image, to employees.
Over the past year, some of the world’s biggest technology companies have been bested by an international group of hackers—some of them teenagers—whose motivations seem at times unusual, said security experts who have investigated the episodes. Uber Technologies said Monday that it was a victim of the group, called Lapsus$, saying it gained access to the company’s internal systems and posted messages, including a graphic image, to employees.
Total: 24