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Israel Cyber-Attack Bombing, New Google Privacy Settings, Traditional Mail Blackmail Scam

Israel Cyber-Attack Bombing, New Google Privacy Settings, Traditional Mail Blackmail Scam



This is your Shared Security Weekly Blaze for May 13th 2019 with your host, Tom Eston. In this week’s episode: Israel bombs a building in retaliation for a cyber-attack, Google adds more privacy settings, and a new blackmail scam that uses traditional mail.

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Hi everyone, welcome to the Shared Security Weekly Blaze where we update you on the top 3 cybersecurity and privacy topics from the week. These podcasts are published every Monday and are 15 minutes or less quickly giving you “news that you can use”.

In breaking news last week it was reported that the Israeli Defense Force, or also known as the IDF, launched an airstrike on the Palestinian Hamas military intelligence headquarters which apparently was the source of an attempted cyber-attack directed towards Israeli targets. The IDF on Twitter said quote “We thwarted an attempted Hamas cyber offensive against Israeli targets. Following our successful cyber defensive operation, we targeted a building where the Hamas cyber operatives work. HamasCyberHQ.exe has been removed” end quote. No further information or statement from the IDF has since been released.

All I can say is, that escalated quickly and that this is the first time that I’ve heard of an actual real-time military strike in response to a cyber-attack. Now the US has done similar attacks in the past, using drones to target a ISIS hacker in 2015 and a British citizen who leaked information about US personnel online. However, those two attacks seemed to be planned out well in advance and were not an immediate response like the one just done by Israel.

Now whether you agree with this response or not, it does set an interesting precedent that cyber-attacks could result in a military response especially between two nation states. I don’t know if we’ll see anything like this happen between two major superpowers like the US and Russia, even though there is apparently a lot of evidence that Russia has conducted cyber-attacks on the US. This is, of course, according to the US intelligence community. Now just remember folks, attribution is hard.

In a surprise move last week, Google announced that it will be rolling out a feature that will allow users to delete some activity data like location history as well as web and app activity. Google users can also choose if they want this activity data saved for either 3 or 18 months, after which any old data will automatically be removed on a continual basis. Not going away is the current ability to manually delete your location history and app activity data.

Now we all know that Google uses your data to recommend you various things like ads and other things based on your search queries and all the data you happen to give all the different Google products that you use. Given the recent privacy uprising over Facebook and even Google’s own grilling by Congress over their policy over user location tracking and data practices back in March, it should be no surprise that Google is now backtracking and finally allowing users more control over their data.

I know it’s hard to remove yourself from Google services. Especially ones like Gmail and Google search which are in fact probably the best email and search engines out there. Sure,


Published on 6 years, 7 months ago






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