034: The pen is mightier than the password
Smashing Security - En podkast av Graham Cluley & Carole Theriault - Torsdager
The UK government wants you to give your credit card details to porn sites, Ashley Madison offers compensation to the people whose lives it ruined, and an adult website wants you to pass its unorthodox and below-the-belt biometric identity check... gulp! All this and Myspace, Google Glass, Fleabag, and much much more is discussed in the latest edition of the "Smashing Security" podcast by computer security veterans Graham Cluley and Carole Theriault, joined this week by technology journalist and broadcaster David McClelland. Follow the show on Twitter at @SmashinSecurity, or visit our website for more episodes. Remember: Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, or your favourite podcast app, to catch all of the episodes as they go live. Thanks for listening! Warning: This podcast may contain nuts, adult themes, and rude language.Special Guest: David McClelland.Sponsored By:Recorded Future: Recorded Future is the real-time threat intelligence company whose patented machine learning technology continuously analyzes technical, open, and dark web sources to give organizations unmatched insight into emerging threats. Sign up for free daily threat intelligence updates at https://recordedfuture.com/intelSupport Smashing SecurityLinks:BBC One - X-Ray, Summer Specials, Photography Special — Watch David McClelland on iPlayer if you're in the UK. There may also be ways of watching this outside the UK. We couldn't possibly comment...Vladimir Putin Cut From Two Upcoming Hollywood Movies — Hollywood ReporterIt's not Yourspace, it's Myspace — Leigh-Anne Galloway shares her research on Myspace's diabolical security.Myspace fixes account security hole - but delete your account anywayThe UK will block online porn from next year. Here's what we know — WiredAshley Madison will pay $11.2 million to data breach victims — EngadgetYou can now use a dick pic as a password. Why, god? Why. — MashableNasty Bug Left Thousands of Internet of Things Devices Open to Hackers — Motherboard