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Image: Mozilla, ZDNet, Jason Leung
Mozilla is expected to expand its virtual private network (VPN) offering in Germany and France by the end of Q1 2021, marking the service’s first expansion inside the EU.The move comes after the browser maker formally launched the Mozilla VPN service last summer in the US, the UK, Canada, New Zealand, Singapore, and Malaysia.
The Mozilla VPN service, which initially launched as a Firefox extension named Firefox Private Network, has currently expanded into a full-device VPN client, available for Windows 10, macOS, Linux, Android, and iOS devices.
The service, which is built around the WireGuard protocol, uses servers provided by Mullvad and is currently priced at $5/month.
Mozilla says the VPN service currently runs on top of more than 280 servers across more than 30 countries across the globe, with “no logging” and “no bandwidth restriction” policies.
Since its informal announcement in 2019 and after its official launch in 2020, the VPN service has been one of the most highly-anticipated VPN offerings on the market, primarily due to Mozilla’s privacy-first reputation.
The browser maker is currently running a waitlist where users can sign up and be notified when the VPN service launches in their country.The VPN service is also Mozilla’s first fully commercial product as part of a new business strategy the browser maker adopted last year. In August 2020, Mozilla fired more than 250 employees and moved away from several open-source and non-revenue-generating products to focus on developing its own revenue streams, as an alternative to its Google search deal that has usually accounted for most of the organization’s budget in the previous decade. More
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison officially opening Macquarie Telecom’s IC3 data centre in Macquarie Park.
Image: Campbell Kwan
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has warned organisations to prioritise trust over costs and efficiency when it comes to data security, pointing to the recent cyber attacks in Ukraine as lessons for organisations to learn from. “I tell you particularly in a more troubled world, especially from a data security point of view, supply chains are frankly more about trust now than they even are about efficiency or cost,” said Morrison, who officially opened Macquarie Telecom’s new AU$85 million hyperscale data centre in Sydney. “We see that in the most terrible events, whether it’s in Ukraine or the stresses that are being placed on our own country here in the Indo-Pacific, when it comes to your data security you’ve got to be dealing with someone you trust and so words like sovereign really mean something — secure, really mean something.” In providing this warning, the prime minister said organisations need to prioritise developing data security skills and building secure critical infrastructure, pointing to Macquarie Telecom’s new data centre as an example. “I think that’s one of the great virtues of where we are today and one of the reasons why investments like this are made in Australia because of the amazing people that we’re training and bringing into our companies and our organisations. This is enabling infrastructure such as this to be built for it,” he said. Macquarie Telecom’s new 10MW data centre, called Intellicentre 3 East (IC3 East), has a federal government-level SCEC Zone 3 or higher security standard and is staffed by government-cleared engineers at all times. According to the company, the data centre has a security ops centre that will be used to support government agencies when they encounter cyber threats, Macquarie Government director Aidan Tudehope said. “The world has changed quite dramatically in recent years and particularly in recent months. This has had a direct impact on the level of cybercriminal activity which is landing on Australian shores,” he said. Macquarie Telecom said the security ops centre contains a dashboard that provides information on where cyber attacks are coming from, what cybercriminals or foreign actors are targeting, and identifying patterns of cyber threats. The IC3 East opening follows the government earlier this week launching an AU$89 million cybercrime centre that is specifically focused on preventing cybercriminals from scamming, stealing, and defrauding Australians. Related Coverage More<!–> Apple Apple has kicked off the latest update to MacOS Sonoma with a few new features. But it’s the sheer number of bug fixes that makes this one stand out and reason enough for Mac users to update their systems. Released on Thursday, MacOS Sonoma 14.4 carries with it three of the same features […] More
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Critical security issues caused by improper access controls in a WordPress plugin designed for GDPR cookie compliance have been resolved, but hundreds of thousands of websites may still be vulnerable to attack. The GDPR Cookie Consent plugin, offered by developer Cookie Law Info through WebToffee, has been designed to help ensure websites are compliant with […] More
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