Did You Get Phished via Google Docs?
Do you use Google Docs? Well, who doesn’t? A few days ago you may have unsuspectingly clicked an invitation to edit a doc, sent to you by a trustful contact from your list.
Do you use Google Docs? Well, who doesn’t? A few days ago you may have unsuspectingly clicked an invitation to edit a doc, sent to you by a trustful contact from your list.
Who needs personal branding? You with the red hat. And you with the white shoes. And that guy with a Claire Underwood-style haircut. In short, everyone needs personal branding.
If you’re a user of Chrome, Firefox or Opera browsers, you may fall victim to a pernicious phishing scam that’s lurking the web these days.
Brute force and complex attacks from a few IPs have been ravaging the internet for the past four months, according to the monthly published Wordfence Attack Reports.
Here is a short history of the most revolutionary releases which have made Wordpress famous for its simplicity, user-friendliness and versatility. Those releases were given the names of iconic 20th-century jazz musicians.
Nearly every networker knows that Internet is not a plaything, and one needs to know how to handle it properly to avoid falling victim to myriads of abusers. True?
Hardly two and a half months have passed since 2017 (the year, not the WordPress version), and the world has already seen three WordPress security updates, the last of which hit the dashboards on March 6.
Wordpress has earned much of its fame as a free and open-source content management system. Installing it is easy. Learning and handling couldn’t be easier.
Methodology of cyber attacks has two main options. Either the attacker deliberately picks up a specific website he wants to hack, or he tries to target the widest possible number of websites which happen to have a certain kind of malfunctioning or just a weak spot, aiming to abuse that spot.
Google’s intention to debunk and penalize potentially unsafe websites is going further.
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