
New Cyberattack Goes Global, Hits WPP, Rosneft, Maersk
More than 80 companies in Russia and Ukraine were initially affected by the Petya virus that disabled computers Tuesday.
Showing 76-90 of 407 results.
More than 80 companies in Russia and Ukraine were initially affected by the Petya virus that disabled computers Tuesday.
There’s a new malware in town, and it has the power to wipe out… power. On Monday, two cybersecurity firms stated that they uncovered a new sophisticated version of malicious software capable of causing mass power outages.
Long before the explosion of data, long before The Oxford Dictionary recognized “cybersecurity” as a word; and long before every device known to man could connect to the Internet, most businesses simply built their own data centers.
Microsoft President and Chief Legal Officer Brad Smith blamed the NSA’s practice of developing hacking methods to use against the U.S. government’s own enemies.
Safe Links, which is already active in Outlook, will be rolled out to all Office 365 ProPlus desktop clients at an unspecified date later this month.
From product releases to perspectives in the field, here’s a recap of top headlines from the week of March 20-24.
When a Microsoft outage in early March took down a host of cloud-based services, the impact on users ranged from inconvenience to hampered productivity. For many managed service providers, the outage meant fielding calls from customers unsure of why they were suddenly unable to access the applications they rely on to operate their businesses.
The disruption affected user access to a range of the tech giant’s online services for more than 16 hours, in some cases. Also unclear is how or if the outages were related to a simultaneous problem with Azure cloud.
As of 6 p.m. ET on Tuesday, users were continuing to have difficulty using Microsoft’s online services.
As of 6 p.m. ET, users were continuing to have difficulty using Microsoft’s online services.
Amazon, that mighty river of e-commerce and cloud computing, recently sprung a leak. You may have heard about it.
Amazon, that mighty river of e-commerce and cloud computing, recently sprung a leak. You may have heard about it.
For MSPs, deciding whether or not to migrate to the cloud requires weighing cloud downtime and other risks against benefits like scalability and outsourced infrastructure management.
One of the biggest questions following Amazon’s cloud outage last week was whether you can use the world’s biggest cloud provider and still avoid downtime when the provider has a major outage – a common if infrequent occurrence. If you can, how to do it? And if there is a way to do it, why isn’t everybody doing it?
One of the biggest questions following Amazon’s cloud meltdown last week was whether you can use the world’s biggest cloud provider and still avoid downtime.