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Welcome To IANS Live - SCIENCE - Apple asks employees to join office 3 days a week from September

iTWire - Ransomware Task Force blows hot air aplenty, says little that s new

iTWire Author s Opinion The views in this column are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of iTWire. Have your say and comment below. Friday, 30 April 2021 07:46 Ransomware Task Force blows hot air aplenty, says little that s new Shares Image by GraphicMama-team from Pixabay An 81-page document issued by a so-called Ransomware Task Force makes no mention of Windows or Microsoft, apart from the fact that one of the co-chairs who drafted this document is from this company. This is the best indicator of exactly what this exercise in verbiage is all about; it is merely another eyewash to divert attention away from the fact that practically all the attacks that have caused the private and public sector enormous grief have been on systems running Windows.

iTWire - Exchange zero-day used to foist miner onto other Exchange servers

The impostors Among Us

The impostors Among Us FacebookTwitterEmail Garvey Mortley, 12, shown with her mother, Amber Coleman-Mortley, outside their home in Bethesda, Md., has been spending a lot more time playing on the gaming site Roblox during the pandemic.Andrew Mangum / New York Times 2020 One recent night, I told my middle child, 10, to get off his iPad. Screen time was over. A few minutes later, he handed me and each of his brothers a different small piece of paper, folded over to obscure what he had written on it. “This is who you are,” he told me. “The Impostor,” my paper read. My son was not questioning my sincerity or his paternity. He was trying to reproduce, with paper and pencil, an internet game that he and millions of others started playing obsessively during the pandemic. It’s called “Among Us.”

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