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Technology

You&ve lost your job and now you face an obsolete, sluggish unemployment system that feels like it was written in the 1950s. Actually, itmore than a feeling. If you&re in New Jersey, New York or Connecticut, your unemployment system was written in 60-year-old Cobol. Meanwhile, if you want to apply for unemployment benefits online in Washington, D.C., the system insists you use Internet Explorer. As I recall, IE was put out to pasture five years ago.
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Read more: The coronavirus is divulging our development oversights
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Patch Tuesday arrives tomorrow, April 14, later in the month than usual. Microsoft has had a truly wretched series of patches going out the chute on Patch Tuesdays.
In spite of what you&ve read and all those Chicken Little cries of impending doom, we haven&t seen a single bonafide emergency security patch in more than a year.
To be sure, we&ve seen a bunch of dire warnings that simply never came true. We've also seen more than our fair share of buggy patches. Don't believe it? Herea detailed list going back almost three years.
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Read more: Patch Tuesday alert: Get your system locked down.
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Creeping erosion of privacy? Desperately needed technology-based solution to a global life-or-death problem? A little of both? Here is what we think we know now about the Apple/Google contact tracing technologyannounced on Friday.
What has happened?
Apple and Google are working together to develop COVID-19 contact tracing technologyfor both Android and iOS devices.
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The Covid-19 outbreak has led to a worldwide experiment in remote working as employees across the world are forced to self-isolate. But will workers return to the office en masse once the disruption caused by the pandemic ends? Or will working from home become the new normal?
Remote working, once quaintly known as telecommuting, has been on the rise for decades, thanks to the availability of digital communication and collaboration tools that enable staff to do their jobs outside of physical office. The trend has accelerated in recent years, aided by a new breed of business-focused group chat apps like Slack and more reliable, user-friendly videoconferencing tools that make it easier to connect with colleagues and be productive without sitting the same office, or even the same country.
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Read more: Remote working, now in addition to forever
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Millions of people across a diverse array of industries are working from home for the foreseeable future. For some, ittheir first time doing so for more than a few days at a time. While we&ve all been adjusting to remote work, we&ve become increasingly reliant on collaboration tools such as Slack, Zoom and Microsoft Teams & but are they actually making us more productive? And once itsafe to return to an office, will employees be willing to give up their remote work lifestyles? ComputerworldMatthew Finnegan joins Juliet to talk collaboration, effectively working from home and how remote work tools will shape the events business and entire industries.
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Read more: Podcast: How will the coronavirus change the method we do our tasks
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Due to you-know-what (if I have to type "corona" or "COVID" again, I'll scream), enterprises have been forced to send a massive number of employees into makeshift home offices within just a few days. That means that there was no time for the security niceties, such as properly processing RFPs for apps that were thoroughly vetted. Given the emergency, employees and IT teams worked with what they could, figuring that they would improve security on the fly as soon as circumstances permitted.
That brings us to MFA. Multifactor authentication is supposed to be just that, but it's typically deployed in the least secure manner — sending straight numeric texts to a mobile device, a tactic that is well-known to be susceptible to man-in-the-middle attacks. So, are there better ways to deploy MFA, something that can be easily executed under today's far-less-than-ideal conditions? Let's dig in.
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Read more: Amid the pandemic, MFA's shortcomings are clearer than ever before
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