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Paul Thurrott

Petri Contributor

Paul Thurrott is an award-winning technology journalist and blogger with over 20 years of industry experience and the author of over 25 books. He is the News Director for the Petri IT Knowledgebase, the major domo at Thurrott.com, and the co-host of three tech podcasts: Windows Weekly with Leo Laporte and Mary Jo Foley, What the Tech with Andrew Zarian, and First Ring Daily with Brad Sams. He was formerly the senior technology analyst at Windows IT Pro and the creator of the SuperSite for Windows.

LATEST

Lenovo Web Site Hacked as Retribution for Superfish Scandal

The embarrassment isn’t over for Lenovo: the web site for the world’s biggest PC maker was taken offline by a malicious hacker group as retribution for the bundling of the Superfish malware on its PCs. The site was down for much of Wednesday but appears to be operational again as of this writing. “We regret…

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SIM Card Maker Acknowledges NSA, GCHQ Intrusion

Gemalto this week admitted that it had indeed been hacked. But the world’s biggest maker of SIM cards says its encryption keys were never stolen or compromised.

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Google Makes Carrier Deals to Compete with Apple Pay

Several months after Apple jumpstarted the market for mobile payments, Google has finally responded. The Android maker has established partnerships with the three biggest wireless carriers in the United States that will see its Google Wallet technology enhanced and bundled with all Android devices they sell. Google actually launched Wallet and mobile “tap and pay”…

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Superfish Drama Winds Down, But the Damage is Done

Last week was a moment of reckoning for the world’s biggest PC maker as Lenovo was thrust awkwardly into the spotlight for preinstalling malware on its consumer PCs. Lenovo belatedly did the right thing, but not before it tried to defend the indefensible and argue that the Superfish malware it was bundling on PCs was…

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Paul Thurrott’s Short Takes: February 20, 2015

Poorly imitated but never duplicated, this week’s other news includes Lenovo’s about-face on Superfish, an NSA and GCHQ hack of SIM cards, AT&T jump the shark moment, a confirmation that, yes, North Korea did hack Sony, Microsoft reneges on promise of Finland data center, and Microsoft partners with Mozilla on web games. “Microsoft Has Suddenly…

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Lenovo Accused of Installing Adware on New PCs

Lenovo, the world’s biggest maker of PCs, has been installing adware on its PCs in order to deliver custom ads. Lenovo says the software is not malicious, but the software could easily be used to spy on users and hack PCs. So the PC maker has stopped shipping it on new PCs and has asked…

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President Obama Calls for Cybersecurity Information Sharing

President Obama this past week signed an executive order calling on the private sector and government to formally share cybersecurity threat information. Noting that frictionless information sharing was key to this effort, president Obama said that US companies and the government should work hand-in-hand to help thwart cyber-attacks. “Government cannot do this alone,” the president…

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Report Uncovers Decades-Long US Hacking Effort

Security researchers at Kaspersky Lab in Russia report that they have discovered how American intelligence agencies have subverted computer hardware, software and networks in an effort to spy on other countries. The surveillance and sabotage technologies have been discovered in systems in China, Iran, Pakistan, Russia, and elsewhere. Kaspersky has a policy of not naming…

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US Senate Offers Bill That Could Aid Microsoft in Overseas Warrant Case

Microsoft has come out in support of a US bill that would limit the extraterritorial reach of search warrants, an issue at the center of an ongoing legal battle with the US Department of Justice. In that case, the DOJ is seeking to force Microsoft to hand over personal email data for a non-US citizen…

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Paul Thurrott’s Short Takes: February 13, 2015

In this week’s other news, Microsoft can’t stop punching itself in the face. Short Takes; Often imitated, never duplicated.

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