Xtra-PC Helps Non-Technical People Install LInux on an Old PC

If you still have an old PC, you’re in luck. A new Linux distribution based on Lubuntu will give any old PC a new lease on life, designed for non-technical users and optimized for popular web sites. Read more…

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Xtra-PC Helps Non-Technical People Install LInux on an Old PC

Hillary Clinton Didn’t Encrypt Her Secretary of State Emails For Months 

New details have emerged about exactly how Hillary Clinton secured the homebrew private email servers she used as Secretary of State. The punchline? Clinton didn’t encrypt her emails or use a certificate for her first three months running the State Department. Read more…

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Hillary Clinton Didn’t Encrypt Her Secretary of State Emails For Months 

How to Maximize Your Free Storage Space on Every Cloud Service

Between Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive and a half dozen other services, the sky’s the limit on how much cloud storage you can get. Here are some of the best ways to get extra free space on each service. Read more…

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How to Maximize Your Free Storage Space on Every Cloud Service

Clinton’s Private Email System Gets a Security "F" Rating

Penguinisto writes According to a scan by Qualys, Hillary Clinton’s personal e-mail server, which has lately generated more than a little controversy in US political circles, has earned an “F” rating for security from the security vendor. Problems include SSL2 support, a weak signature, and only having support for older TLS protocols, among numerous other problems. Note that there are allegations that the email server was possibly already hacked in 2013. (Note: Mrs. Clinton plans on Giving a press conference to the public today on the issue.) Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Clinton’s Private Email System Gets a Security "F" Rating

The CIA Has Been Desperately Trying to Break Apple’s Encryption System

The Intercept is reporting that Central Intelligence Agency researchers have been waging a multi-year campaign to break the security systems used by Apple on its devices. Read more…

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The CIA Has Been Desperately Trying to Break Apple’s Encryption System

Firefox 37 To Check Security Certificates Via Blocklist

An anonymous reader writes The next version of Firefox will roll out a ‘pushed’ blocklist of revoked intermediate security certificates, in an effort to avoid using ‘live’ Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP) checks. The ‘OneCRL’ feature is similar to Google Chrome’s CRLSet, but like that older offering, is limited to intermediate certificates, due to size restrictions in the browser. OneCRL will permit non-live verification on EV certificates, trading off currency for speed. Chrome pushes its trawled list of CA revocations every few hours, and Firefox seems set to follow that method and frequency. Both Firefox and Chrome developers admit that OCSP stapling would be the better solution, but it is currently only supported in 9% of TLS certificates. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Firefox 37 To Check Security Certificates Via Blocklist

Hillary Clinton Hid Her Emails While Secretary of State and That’s Bad

Hillary Clinton’s burgeoning presidential campaign is not off to a good start. Just a day after papers reported that the former Secretary of State would make a bid for the nation’s highest office in April, The New York Times reports that Hillary Clinton used only her personal email address while serving as Secretary of State . This is bad. Read more…

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Hillary Clinton Hid Her Emails While Secretary of State and That’s Bad

Blackphone 2 Is Probably the World’s Most Secure Smartphone

“While the rest of the market is going one way, with selfie sticks and curved screens, we’re going down another, to the heart of problems, sticking with privacy and security, ” said Silent Circle’s Mike Janke at the launch of the company’s new secure smartphone, the Blackphone 2. And he’s not kidding — though no frills in design, it’s kitted out with some serious security features. Read more…

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Blackphone 2 Is Probably the World’s Most Secure Smartphone

Blu-Ray Players Hackable Via Malicious Discs

An anonymous reader writes: Some Blu-Ray disc interactive features use a Java variant for UIs and applications. Stephen Tomkinson just posted a blog discussing how specially created Blu-Ray discs can be used to hack various players using exploits related to their Java usage. He hacked one Linux-based, network-connected player to get root access through vulnerabilities introduced by the vendor. He did the same thing against Windows Blu-Ray player software. Tomkinson was then able to combine both, along with detection techniques, into a single disc. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Blu-Ray Players Hackable Via Malicious Discs