Go Here to Read this Fast! Another major US hospital hacked, data on 1.4 million patients leaked
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Another major US hospital hacked, data on 1.4 million patients leaked
Go Here to Read this Fast! Another major US hospital hacked, data on 1.4 million patients leaked
Originally appeared here:
Another major US hospital hacked, data on 1.4 million patients leaked
Originally appeared here:
I pitted ChatGPT search against Perplexity to see which was the best AI search engine, and the results surprised me
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LastPass 2022 hack fallout continues with millions of dollars more reportedly stolen
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Want to ditch Microsoft Teams? Skype is still here, and just made a significant change
Go Here to Read this Fast! Beware, popular Christmas apps are bad for your privacy
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Beware, popular Christmas apps are bad for your privacy
Go Here to Read this Fast! Operational silos could overwhelm more enterprises in the future
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Operational silos could overwhelm more enterprises in the future
Social media users often make posts about Apple products and features, either to teach followers or to warn them of potential issues. Sometimes, these involve claims that are just false.
One new trend is to accuse Apple of spying on users, in a way that doesn’t make sense for a variety of reasons. It’s apparently doing so via the Photos widget in iOS.
It’s some years since Apple took steps to at least make it harder for people to start up their Macs using external drives. That was a privacy issue, a security issue, and a bit of a pain for anyone who remembers Mac drives failing.
Now according to developer Dave Nanian, Apple has gone further, maybe unintentionally. Nanian is the developer of backup app SuperDuper! and says that since macOS Sequoia 15.2 has changed a feature called the Replicator, his app has been unable to create a bootable backup.