HOTTEST

Roku Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source<!–> on Google. ZDNET’s key takeaways A Roku beta test may rearrange your home screen apps. This beta test is not opt-in. The redesign will prioritize the apps you use the most. Thanks to beta testing that’s now rolling out to more users, your Roku home screen […] More

Cybersecurity firm Rapid7 said it has signed a deal to acquire Velociraptor, makers of open-source framework used for endpoint monitoring, digital forensics, and incident response. The financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
Rapid7 said the Velociraptor technology is designed to help SecOps teams hunt for new threats quicker through community-driven technology, allowing for incidents and detections to be easily shared across the broader security industry.”The Velociraptor standalone offering allows incident response teams to rapidly collect and examine artifacts from across a network, and deliver forensic detail following a security incident,” Rapid7 wrote in a blog post. “In the event of an incident, an investigator controls the Velociraptor agents to hunt for malicious activity, run targeted collections, perform file analysis, or pull large data samples. The Velociraptor Query Language (VQL) allows investigators to develop custom hunts to meet specific investigation needs.”Rapid7 said it does not plan to make Velociraptor a commercial offering; however, the company does plan to integrate the technology in its detection and response portfolio, including the Rapid7 Insight platform.Rapid7’s purchase of Velociraptor comes on the heels of its acquisitions of Alcide in January and DivvyCloud in April 2020. The company said both acquisitions are meant to bolster its ability to provide customers with a cloud-native security platform for managing risk and compliance.RELATED STORIES: More

<!–> Google If you have a Google Nest security camera, you’ll soon be paying a little more to keep your home safe. Since it debuted in 2019, the Google Nest Aware subscription has cost a flat $6 per month. Those days are over, however, as the service is raising prices to $8 a month. Paying […] More

Google has commenced the roll out of its new data safety section for Android users on the Play Store. The new section will require app developers to inform users on how they collect data, who has access to that data, and what data is collected.Further information available to users will include whether the developer has qualified their security practices against a global security standard, whether the app has committed to follow Google Play’s Families Policy, and more granular details relating to an app’s security practices such as whether users can ask for data to be deleted. Google will also require developers revise their data safety section when updating the functionality or data handling practices of their apps. “We heard from users and app developers that displaying the data an app collects, without additional context, is not enough. Users want to know for what purpose their data is being collected and whether the developer is sharing user data with third parties,” the company said in a blog post.”In addition, users want to understand how app developers are securing user data after an app is downloaded. That’s why we designed the data safety section to allow developers to clearly mark what data is being collected and for what purpose it’s being used. Users can also see whether the app needs this data to function or if this data collection is optional.”Although the roll out of the new section has already commenced, developers have until the July 20 to fill out the section. Moreover, Google encouraged users to access the Android privacy dashboard to manage app permission for the use of location data, microphone, camera options, and to also review data access by apps.The new requirements come a month after Google removed an app with over 100,000 downloads from its Play Store after security researchers warned that the app was able to harvest the Facebook credentials of smartphone users and, additionally, after Google was reportedly fined €2 million by the Paris Commercial Court for acting abusively to developers with apps on the Play Store.Related Coverage More

StackCommerce The following content is brought to you by ZDNet partners. If you buy a product featured here, we may earn an affiliate commission or other compensation. ZDNet Recommends With the possible exception of a certain “big game,” nobody watches TV for the commercials. That’s even more true when it comes to the internet. Ads […] More
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