Huawei can covertly access mobile networks through back doors meant for law enforcement, the U.S. has told allies in a bid to show that the firm poses a security threat. . U.S. officials say Huawei Technologies Co. can covertly access mobile-phone networks around the world through “back doors” designed for use by law enforcement, as Washington tries to persuade allies to exclude the Chinese company from their networks. The link for this article located at The Wall Street Journal is no longer available. . U.S. officials warn Huawei can secretly access global mobile networks through back doors intended for law enforcement.. huawei, covertly, mobile, networks, through, doors, meant, enforcement. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
US legislators have sent an open letter to Google CEO Sundar Pichai asking for details about Sensorvault, an internal Google database that keeps track of users' historical geo-location details. . Members of the US House Energy and Commerce Committee want Google to reveal what exact user information the company has been collecting inside this database, and who else has access to this data. Legislators are sending this formal inquiry after a New York Times report published earlier this month revealed that US law enforcement had been regularly accessing Sensorvault user data in a dragnet-like fashion to obtain location details for hundreds or thousands of users at a time in order to identify crime suspects. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . Congressional panel requests information from Google regarding the data collection habits of Sensorvault.. Location Tracking, Google Database, Privacy Concerns, User Data Access, Government Inquiry. . Brittany Day
One of the most prized rights of any American is the right to privacy and security. It's something people in some countries would kill for. Yet now there appears to be a very frightening trend growing. Your privacy and security are being thrown out the window wholesale in favor of easier access by law enforcement. A recent example of this can be seen with the announcement that Microsoft has been providing a tool to investigators that can effectively rip your Windows security to shreds in seconds, exposing all your private data to whoever wants to look at it. A key point brought up in this article is the fact that prevention of crimes should hold higher priority over that of solving crimes. It seems that breaking security for the sake of forensics would not only make crimes easier to "solve", but also easier to commit. How do you feel about this approach to improving forensics?. The link for this article located at Read this full article is no longer available. . The link for this article located at Read this full article is no longer available.. prized, rights, american, right, privacy, security, something. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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