Monday 7 March 2016

Behavioral biometrics and the future of the password | PCWorld

Webroot on the rise of polymorphic malware threats | PCWorld

Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.

PCWorld

Top Stories @PCWorld

Mar 07, 2016
Featured Image
Video

Behavioral biometrics and the future of the password | PCWorld

At the 2016 RSA Conference in San Francisco, CSO chats with SecureAuth about their behavioral biometrics technology, which allows or prevents access depending on a person's keystroke and mousing techniques. Could this method replace or improve on password authentication? Watch Now

Twitter Facebook LinkedIn

Your Must-Read Stories

Webroot on the rise of polymorphic malware threats | PCWorld
Microsoft kills Fable Legends and most likely the storied Lionhead Studios along with it
It's AI vs. humans in this week's history-making Go face-off
BioCatch on the rise of behavioral biometrics | PCWorld
How to add a web site to your Android home screen with Chrome
Verizon's 'Supercookie' FCC settlement requires opt-in for some tracking
How to seize control of your privacy with Mozilla's Firefox browser
Verizon Wireless settles FCC complaint about supercookie tracking
These are the worst domains for harboring malware
Gogo buys more satellite capacity after lawsuit over slow in-flight Wi-Fi
Tested: How many CPU cores you really need for DirectX 12 gaming
Internet Archive brings hundreds of classic Apple II games to your web browser
Maintainers of new generic top level domains have a hard time keeping abuse in check
Supreme Court denies Apple appeal in e-books price fixing case
Thumbnail Image
Video

Webroot on the rise of polymorphic malware threats | PCWorld

At the 2016 RSA Conference, CSO chats with Grayson Milbourne of Webroot, about the latest malware trends it saw from its customer base, including the growing importance of polymorphic malware and the flaws in signature-based detection. Watch Now

Thumbnail Image

Microsoft kills Fable Legends and most likely the storied Lionhead Studios along with it

Lionhead wasn't always successful, but it's sad to see an ambitious studio die over Fable Legends. Read More

Thumbnail Image

It's AI vs. humans in this week's history-making Go face-off

When IBM's Deep Blue beat chess champion Garry Kasparov back in 1997, the world was agog over AI's potential. This week, Google DeepMind's AlphaGo system will face an even tougher test in a series of matches against a top-ranked master in the ancient game of Go. Read More

Thumbnail Image
Video

BioCatch on the rise of behavioral biometrics | PCWorld

At the 2016 RSA Conference, CSO chats with Uri Rivner from BioCatch about how behavioral biometrics will improve authentication methods, not just at login but during an entire web- or tablet-based session. Watch Now

Thumbnail Image

How to add a web site to your Android home screen with Chrome

With just a few steps you can put that favorite website of yours just one tap away. Read More

Thumbnail Image

Verizon's 'Supercookie' FCC settlement requires opt-in for some tracking

Verizon's settlement with the FCC required user opt-in for some Supercookie tracking, but users must still opt out for total privacy. Read More

Thumbnail Image

How to seize control of your privacy with Mozilla's Firefox browser

Mozilla's open-source Firefox browser is probably the best choice for keeping your data away from prying eyes. Here's how to maximize your privacy with minimal annoyance. Read More

Thumbnail Image

Verizon Wireless settles FCC complaint about supercookie tracking

Verizon Wireless, in a settlement over its use of so-called supercookies to track mobile customers, will notify them about its targeted advertising practices and will obtain their permission before sharing personal identifiers with third parties. Read More

Thumbnail Image

These are the worst domains for harboring malware

Generic top-level domains (TLDs) that have sprung up in recent years have become a magnet for cybercriminals, to the point where some of them host more malicious domains than legitimate ones. Read More

Thumbnail Image

Gogo buys more satellite capacity after lawsuit over slow in-flight Wi-Fi

In-flight Internet provider Gogo plans to boost access speeds after a legal spat with customer American Airlines over slow service. Read More

Thumbnail Image

Tested: How many CPU cores you really need for DirectX 12 gaming

DirectX 12 will be able to use multi-core CPUs more efficiently, but how many more cores will you need? We benchmark an eight-core CPU in three DirectX 12 tests, and the results may disappoint you. Read More

Thumbnail Image

Internet Archive brings hundreds of classic Apple II games to your web browser

Classic Apple II games and programs hit a milestone at the Internet Archive. Who's up for some Lode Runner? Read More

Thumbnail Image

Maintainers of new generic top level domains have a hard time keeping abuse in check

Generic top-level domains (TLDs) that have sprung up in recent years have become a magnet for cybercriminals, to the point where some of them host more malicious domains than legitimate ones. Read More

Thumbnail Image

Supreme Court denies Apple appeal in e-books price fixing case

Apple will pay US$450 million as a settlement for e-book price fixing after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the company's appeal of a lower court's antitrust ruling. Read More

Twitter Facebook Google+

You are currently subscribed to Top Stories @PCWorld as messi1927@gmail.com.

Unsubscribe from this newsletter | Manage your subscriptions | Subscribe | Privacy Policy

Copyright (C) 2016 PCWorld, 501 2nd Street, San Francisco, CA 94107

Please do not reply to this message.
To contact someone directly, send an e-mail to online@pcworld.com.

No comments:

ads