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Twitter acquires dynamic duo at Whisper Systems, works to beef up privacy / security
You know that tweet you just wrote about your innermost emotions and the tasty sandwich you just ate? It’s about to become that much more secure. Adding to its list of available resources, Twitter has acquired Whisper Systems, a two-man security outfit specializing in mobile device security and data scrambling on the Android operating system. Whisper, founded in 2010 by security industry mainstays Moxie Marlinspike and Stuart Anderson, has garnered a reputation for exposing high-profile vulnerabilities in systems that encrypt data over the Internet and WiFi networks. An exact buyout price for the company has yet to be released publicly — though Marlinspike has released tools like SSLStrip that demonstrate vulnerabilities in supposedly secure web sites and has been working on a tool known as ‘Convergence’ — which helps point out unreliable web certificate authorities. Not a bad find for Twitter, a company that has yet to switch over to a default HTTPS option for its 100 million active members’ posts.
Continue reading Twitter acquires dynamic duo at Whisper Systems, works to beef up privacy / security
Twitter acquires dynamic duo at Whisper Systems, works to beef up privacy / security originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 29 Nov 2011 09:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Logitech Alert Video Security System gets Dropbox support, lets you park 100GB of footage in the cloud

We liked Logitech’s Alert Video Security System when we took it for a week-long spin last year, which at that point allowed remote access to live HD camera footage, and video stored on your PC. But a new partnership with Dropbox adds cloud storage to the equation, letting you boot video directly to the web to supplement the PC- and microSD-based options already in place. Packages are available today, and come with 2GB of storage for free, 50GB for per month or 100GB for per month — Logitech isn’t exactly giving away the service, but when you consider that a bare-bones Alert system costs 0, those virtual add-ons sound a bit more reasonable. Jump past the break for the full rundown from Logitech, and get ready to beef up those passwords — having your email account hacked is one thing, but you certainly don’t want anyone watching you at home, in real-time or the past.
Continue reading Logitech Alert Video Security System gets Dropbox support, lets you park 100GB of footage in the cloud
Logitech Alert Video Security System gets Dropbox support, lets you park 100GB of footage in the cloud originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 12 Nov 2011 06:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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