“Microsoft on Friday said it’s investigating an incident wherein a driver signed by the company turned out to be a malicious Windows rootkit that was observed communicating with command-and-control (C2) servers located in China.”
Google reportedly made it difficult for smartphone users to find privacy settings
“Unredacted documents in Arizona’s lawsuit against Google show that company executives and engineers were aware that the search giant had made it hard for smartphone users to keep location information private, Insider reported.”
Amazon devices will soon automatically share your Internet with neighbors
“If you use Alexa, Echo, or any other Amazon device, you have only 10 days to opt out of an experiment that leaves your personal privacy and security hanging in the balance. On June 8, the merchant, Web host, and entertainment behemoth will automatically enroll the devices in Amazon Sidewalk.”
Google Gets Serious About Two-Factor Authentication. Good!
““Turn on two-factor authentication” is solid advice, and WIRED has repeated it for years. Doing so ensures that your password isn’t the only line of defense against unauthorized access to your accounts. The only problem? The onus was always on you to figure out how to make it happen.”
Craig Federighi says the Mac has an ‘unacceptable’ malware problem – 9to5Mac
“As detailed earlier this afternoon, Craig Federighi is currently testifying during the Apple vs. Epic lawsuit.”
Facebook Messenger becomes the third non-Google app to reach 5 billion installs on the Play Store
“With the popularity of Android, plenty of applications have managed to cross over the one billion installs threshold on the Play Store. It’s a lot more selective in the five billion-plus club, which only two non-Google apps have ever succeeded in joining.”
Only 4 percent of US iPhone users have agreed to app tracking after iOS 14.5
“Facebook’s worries about iOS 14.5 might have been justified. Flurry Analytics (owned by Engadget parent Verizon Media) has determined that just 4 percent of American iPhone users running the the new software opted in to app tracking in the first 12 days after it arrived.”
Update to iOS 14.5.1 Right Now or Your iPhone Is a Sitting Duck for Hackers
“Apple has rushed out fixes to two major vulnerabilities in iOS and iPadOS 14.5, last month’s update that implemented its App Tracking Transparency feature. Both bugs could have allowed malicious parties to remotely execute code, possibly leading to the takeover of an affected device.”
Confused Feds Subpoena Signal for Data It Doesn’t Collect
“For the second time in several years, Signal has been subpoenaed by federal investigators for data that the encrypted chat app company doesn’t actually collect. In a statement published Wednesday, the company disclosed that it had recently received a summons from the U.S.”
Actively exploited Mac 0-day neutered core OS security defenses
“When Apple released the latest version, 11.3, for macOS on Monday, it didn’t just introduce support for new features and optimizations.”