Microsoft released 12 updates to address vulnerabilities in Microsoft Windows that may allow an attacker to take control of an affected system, said a U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team alert Tuesday.
Adobe released a security update to address vulnerabilities in Shockwave Player that may have allowed a remote attacker to take control of an affected system, said a U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team alert Tuesday.
Google released Chrome v 45.0.2454.85 to address multiple vulnerabilities for Linux, Mac and Windows, said a U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team alert Tuesday. Exploitation of the vulnerabilities may allow an attacker to take control of an affected system, it said.
Many cities with large populations of Latino, Korean, Chinese and Vietnamese speakers have few broadcasters transmitting in those languages, said Asian Americans Advancing Justice, the Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council, NAACP and 23 other groups in a letter to FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler posted Thursday in docket 06-119. Saturday marks the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, which took New Orleans’ only Spanish-language station off air for eight days, the groups said. “During those eight days, over 100,000 Latinos had no landline service, no cellular telephony, no television, no radio, and no print media in their language,” the groups said. Civil rights organizations in 2005 proposed the “Katrina Petition,” under which stations in localities would be designated to broadcast emergency alert system (EAS) warnings in multiple languages, but the FCC hasn’t acted on it, the groups said. The FCC should require stations to certify they will help other stations transmit life-saving information in emergencies as a condition of license renewal, they said. “Stations that declare that they ‘will not transmit, or even help other stations transmit, life-saving information in an emergency’ should have their fitness to hold an FCC license formally reviewed,” the letter said. “State EAS plans can easily be amended to incorporate reasonable methods of ensuring that lifesaving information finds its way to the public in an emergency.”
Emergency alert system officials are conflicted about the possibilities of giving electronic messaging and social media an increased role in emergency alerting, according to panelists at an FCC EAS workshop Thursday. There are ways to use multimedia to get information to the public and get information from the public, said Jay English, APCO director-communications center and 911 service. Combining EAS and wireless messages and social media makes Maine Association of Broadcasters CEO Suzanne Goucher “very nervous,” she said. “We’ve got a lot of serious top-level questions” to answer before such changes are implemented, Goucher said.
A day after AT&T announced an expanded partnership with Voxx (see 1508250057) for a subscription-based two-way vehicle protection service, Verizon Telematics revealed availability of its own aftermarket version, now called "Verizon hum." Verizon unveiled hum under the name Verizon Vehicle at the North American International Auto Show in January as a self-installable service delivering diagnostic information and “peace of mind.”
There are benefits and challenges to using telecom technology to establish the California Earthquake Early Warning System (EEWS), said speakers from AT&T and Qualcomm and members of the California Office of Emergency Services, on an Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions (ATIS) webinar Tuesday. Speakers said EEWS can use the commercial cellular network to ensure the public receives early notice before a seismic event. EEWS is meant to complement California's current earthquake sensing and alert system, the California Integrated Seismic Network (CISN), and will use mobile communications to send mass alerts to personal mobile devices.
The FCC Consumer and Governmental Affairs and Public Safety bureaus' joint workshop Aug. 27 on promoting wider accessibility and increased use of the emergency alert system (EAS) (see 1508040030) will have three sessions, hear from Commissioner Mignon Clyburn and Public Safety Bureau Chief David Simpson, and include state and local officials, the FCC said in a public notice. The workshop will include a panel on ways to improve alert accessibility, such as synchronizing EAS audio and visual crawls, with Christian Vogler, director of Gallaudet University's Technology Access Program; Lillian McDonald, managing director of Twin Cities Public Television/Echo Minnesota Partnership; Charles McCobb, a program manager of the Federal Emergency Management Agency's Integrated Public Alert and Warning System (IPAWS); and Zainab Alkebsi, policy counsel at the National Association of the Deaf. A panel on promoting EAS use will be Jay English, APCO director-Comm Center & 9-1-1 services; Wade Witmer, IPAWS deputy director; Steve Souder, director of Fairfax County, Virginia's Department of Public Safety Communications; and Suzanne Goucher, Maine Association of Broadcasters CEO. The 1 to 4:30 p.m. workshop will be in the commission meeting room and streamed live at the FCC website. To register: John Evanoff, Public Safety Bureau attorney, at john.evanoff@fcc.gov or 202-418-0848.
Adobe released a security update to address a vulnerability that may allow a remote attacker to obtain sensitive information from an affected system, said an alert from the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team Tuesday. The security updates are for LiveCycle Data Services versions 4.7, 4.6.2, 4.5 and 3.0x, the alert said. Microsoft also released a critical security update to address a vulnerability in Internet Explorer, said a U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team alert Wednesday. Exploitation of the vulnerability could allow a remote attacker to take control of an affected system if the user viewed a specially crafted webpage, it said.
LAS VEGAS -- Executives at two companies at opposite IoT ends viewed companies’ liability in the connected home in starkly different ways during a panel at the IoT Evolution Expo Tuesday. The disparity underscored some of the vulnerability and confusion in the nascent market that were cited multiple times during panels on the smart home at the conference.