> April, 2020 - Vinova - Page 3
South Korea winning the fight against coronavirus using big-data and AI | The Daily Star

South Korea winning the fight against coronavirus using big-data and AI | The Daily Star

South Korea is fighting the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) by relying on its technological forte. The country has an advanced digital platform for big-data mining, along with artificial intelligence (AI) and Koreans are leading the technological front, with Samsung competing closely with Apple.Inc of USA. Utilising big-data analysis, AI-powered advance warning systems, and intensive observation methodology, South Korea has already managed to bring the coronavirus situation in the country under control in a short time. The government-run big-data platform stores information of all citizens and resident foreign nationals and integrates all government organisations, hospitals, financial services, mobile operators, and other services into it. South Korea is using the analysis, information and references provided by this integrated data — all different real-time responses and information produced by the platform are promptly conveyed to people with different AI-based applications. Whenever someone is tested positive for COVID-19, all the people in the vicinity are provided with the infected person’s travel details, activities, and commute maps for the previous two weeks through mobile notifications sent as a push system. Government-run health services receive information on the person’s contacts, making it easier to track those whom s/he had met during that time, and bring them under observation and medical tests. AI ensures prompt execution of all these steps. Hospitals, ambulance services, mobile test labs — all rely on IT sector and technology to deliver prompt and efficient services.  South Korea also introduced drive-through coronavirus testing, in which a person drives his car inside a mobile testing lab, get his samples collected while sitting inside the vehicle, and gets test results within a few minutes. If...
Fergus high school’s cyber security success good news for industry | CBC News

Fergus high school’s cyber security success good news for industry | CBC News

Teens from Fergus are among the youngest cyber security experts in the country. For the third year in a row, students from Centre Wellington District High School in Fergus will be competing against  teams from across the country in the international cyber security competition for high school students, Cyber Titan.  The senior team ranked third in Canada and 44th in the world this year, a feat that didn’t really surprise them. “We work really well together. We study hard. We practice. Communication is a big part. And we just work really well together as a team. And we know our stuff,” said Edward Noel. Rachel Routly, who was on the all-female team called the Terabytches last year, is now on the mixed-gender senior team. She says all the team members are in the same grade and have classes together, which helps them mesh. She adds, “it’s good to prove that girls can do well when they’re not only on a girls’ team.” Edward Noel was on the senior team last year and says he’s excited about the team’s chances this year. “This team is actually, like, passionate about cyber security,” he said. “The passion combined with the teamwork and the mentality coming in, like, you know, I want to be the best in the world. It’s, like, yeah, that’s what gets you the win.” Get youth thinking about cyber security It’s that passion and drive to learn about cyber security that is also exciting to people in the industry who hope to one day recruit young minds. Kathryn Hodge at the cyber security company eSentire in Waterloo says their firm often focuses on...
How to Get Your Web Developer on Board with SEO [Bonus PDF] – Whiteboard Friday – Moz

How to Get Your Web Developer on Board with SEO [Bonus PDF] – Whiteboard Friday – Moz

You’ve figured out what’s wrong, and you’ve delivered a laundry list of demands to your web dev team: re-index these pages, fix this duplicate content, redirect these URLs… but how often are those fixes prioritized, and how much time do you invest in pushing to get them there? Cultivating a positive, productive relationship with your web developers is one of the smartest (and most empathetic) things you can do as an SEO. After all, they’re your other half, the key to getting your work done quickly and well. In this Whiteboard Friday, Britney Muller shares six essential ways to get your web dev on board with SEO, from working to better understand their role and offer help when you can, to sharing your wins and asking for feedback on working together. And don’t miss the end — we’ve released our brand-new Web Developer’s SEO Cheat Sheet for 2020, the perfect pairing for today’s video!  Click on the whiteboard image above to open a high resolution version in a new tab! Video Transcription Hey, Moz fans. Welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Today we’re talking all about how to get your web dev on board with SEO. So really excited. I think you’ll notice my biggest point here, and I couldn’t feel more strongly about the fact that we really do have so much to learn from developers, it’s wild. Hopefully, this video helps kind of open some of your minds or expand some of the ways in which you can do that, because it will make you a lot stronger.  1. Create a genuine relationship with developers and...
Cross-Platform Mobile App Development with Flutter – Codemagic blog

Cross-Platform Mobile App Development with Flutter – Codemagic blog

There are cross-platform frameworks like Xamarin, React Native already available in the market to develop iOS and Android apps with single code base. However, Flutter has entered very strongly in the race of the cross-platform mobile app development. In this article, we will explore: What’s Flutter Flutter is Google’s mobile app SDK which allows developers to write apps for iOS and Android using the same language and source code. With Flutter, developers can build native like apps using Dart programming language and using its own widgets. Being backed by Google, Flutter is emerging as strong competitors for the Xamarin and React Native. Flutter uses Dart programming language which was introduced by Google in 2011 and is rarely used by developers. Read more, what are the pros and cons of Flutter. Although, Dart is rarely used language, it’s easy to learn and use. The Dart framework uses Skia C++ engine which has all the protocols, compositions and channels to make apps looks like native. Flutter also has widgets for Material Design and Cupertino that allow developers to easily render the UI on both iOS and Android platform. Brief History of Flutter In the beginning, Flutter was known as “Sky” and only supported on the Android platform. As Flutter used Dart programming language which since long but it was only used inside the Google. Flutter was publicly announced in 2015 at the Dart developer summit, at that time, Flutter used to called as “Sky”. You can watch initial announcement video here. Google then announced Flutter preview release 2 at the Google Developer days in Shanghai and subsequently at Google I/O. Finally,...
Black-box Penetration Testing – How To Perform External in Organization

Black-box Penetration Testing – How To Perform External in Organization

The objective was simple – see how susceptible the organization is from an external point of view and test the effectiveness of the security controls that are managed enterprise-wide. As such, asides, the company name, we were given “ZERO” information to perform an external black-box penetration Testing. This black-box external penetration Testing Performing with a by a client called (Hackme)  OSINT 101 We kicked off with some Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) 101 :). There are quite a number of open source intelligence tools – to assist in gathering emails, subdomains, hosts, employee names, etc from different public sources like search engines and shodan. There is an exhaustive list of such awesome tools here . Using quite a few open source intelligence tools, we obtained publicly available documents relating to the organization using Black-box Penetration Testing methods. With Google dork to the rescue, we ran some basic search strings: “site:*.hackme.com ext:xls OR ext:docx OR ext:pptx” . Of course, our aim was not to tirelessly search for documents. Rather, our objective was to understand the organization’s naming schema by examining the metadata of the documents which is found in the “properties section” of the document (most especially Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, and Excel). One can also use FOCA for this. From this, I noticed that employees emails followed a particular naming convention – the first letter of the firstname + surname @ domain.com i.e. [email protected]. Armed with this knowledge, we forked out from LinkedIn the list of all current employees of Hackme using the following google dork syntax: site:linkedin.com -inurl:dir “at Hackme” “Current”. A typical example is shown below using Google Inc as a...
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