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Mirrors Edge Windows Phone 8,1 Nokia Lumia 520

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Countermeasure in Home Depot Data Breach: MacBooks, iPhones For Execs

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Home Depot shores up security with Macs and iPhones after data breach

 

As part of the cleanup from the Home Depot data breach, senior executives were issued “new, secure iPhones and MacBooks” after the breach was discovered to be the result of a Windows vulnerability. 9to5Mac reports on the specifics mentioned in a Wall Street Journal piece that breaks down the events leading to the largest retail breach on record (as of now).

Similar to the breach at Target, Home Depot was hacked by someone who stole a password from a vendor, which provided access to a system that wasn’t very well segregated from the rest of Home Depot’s network, allowing the hacker to gain access to “more secure” Home Depot data, including not just 56 million credit card accounts, but a bonus 53 million email addresses.

Specifically this access was obtained using a vulnerability in Windows, which Microsoft promptly released a patch for. However, since hackers were already inside, it did no good. Self-checkout lanes were targeted, and the malware installed on those remained there for five months.

For more information about the timeline of the hack and how it was discovered, check out the Wall Street Journal article about the conclusions from Home Depot, security personnel, and law enforcement.

The Mac Observer Spin

It’s interesting to me how this happened, and how one of the first steps taken to counteract the Windows vulnerability was to use a Mac. It was nice to get to read the breakdown of the findings and the timeline of the breach, sometimes with retailers that information doesn’t ever come out, so I’m glad to see it made a splash. I have nothing against Home Depot, but I hope with the advent of Apple Pay and “chip and sign” credit cards, Home Depot manages to hold on to this auspicious record for a very long time. I’d really like some time to recover from my breach fatigue.

 

TIP: How To Get The Youtube App Back In iOS6

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It’s Official: T-Mobile Won the iPhone 6 Launch

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It's Official: T-Mobile Won the iPhone 6 Launch

When Apple (AAPL) introduced iPhone 6 models, it set off the traditional scramble by wireless carriers to poach one another’s customers. Exciting new phones are one of the best ways for carriers to lure people, and this year has been especially hectic. The new iPhones were seen as a particularly big upgrade, all four carriers were planning major launches for the first time, and it is now easier than ever for customers to switch carriers without facing a financial penalty.

T-Mobile’s (TMUS) latest quarterly report make it pretty clear who won. The company posted the best subscriber growth in its history, adding 1.4 million postpaid customers to the T-Mobile brand in the quarter. In October, the first full month of iPhone sales, 2.4 people left a competitor to join T-Mobile for every single T-Mobile defector. The biggest haul came from Sprint (S), the second member of the wireless industry’s junior varsity tier, which sent 2.5 customers to T-Mobile for each T-Mobile convert it won. T-Mobile also lured more than 2.2 customers from AT&T(T) and Verizon (VZ) for each one it lost.

“There’s a fallacy in the the industry that AT&T and Verizon are going to sit where they are, and Sprint and T-Mobile are going to beat one another over the head,” said John Legere, T-Mobile’s chief executive officer, during a call with investors on Tuesday. The only reason for modesty around the iPhone launch, he said, was the expectation that T-Mobile would continue to have trouble keeping the iPhone in stock through November. The larger iPhone 6 Plus will face supply constraints even longer.

Many people expected T-Mobile to come out ahead this fall. It has been outpacing its competitors ever since it launched its “Uncarrier” campaign, which seeks to overturn such fixtures of the wireless industry as two-year contracts. It stands to reason that a network with fewer iPhone subscribers has more to gain and less to lose than networks with more of them.

But the concern with T-Mobile hasn’t been about its ability to add customers. The upstart carrier has made sacrifices to win the legions of converts, and Legere is fighting against the assumption that T-Mobile and Sprint are basically doing the same thing: undercutting bigger competitors on price. That has been Sprint’s explicit strategy, and it’s probably necessary because the company openly admits that its network lags behind those of AT&T and Verizon. T-Mobile has also sacrificed revenue in aggressive pursuit of customers, but when he talks to investors Legere insists at length that T-Mobile is charging customers more than ever. That’s a slightly awkward position for a man who has tailored his public persona as the foul-mouthed voice of the common man fighting against faceless phone companies.

In fact, T-Mobile charged more than ever in the past quarter. The average monthly bill for its customers was $49.84, up slightly from a year before. Promotions related to the holiday season and the new iPhone will lower prices for the rest of the year, but T-Mobile says they will begin rising again in January.