Week in Review: October 27, 2017
Week in review: CAIDA releases eye-opening report on DoS attacks, FCC postpones vote on Net Neutrality, and more
Week in review: CAIDA releases eye-opening report on DoS attacks, FCC postpones vote on Net Neutrality, and more
This week, the Internet Monitor learns about the State of the Internet from Akamai, the use of machine learning in Alphabet’s Project Loon, the AT&T and China Mobile deal, the rollback of privacy rules in the FCC, and the arrival of 5G in 2020.
This week, the Internet Monitor finds ways to delete oneself from the Internet, discusses Facebook’s fake news solutions, reports Internet bans during the election in Gambia, and covers the global attack launched by the Mirai botnet.
This week, the Internet Monitor covers the October DDoS attack and the growing threat of unsecure IoT devices, the new cybersecurity law in China that will reduce security and potentially expose personal information of users, the risk of hacking the U.S. presidential election, and the FCC privacy laws that protect user data from broadband providers.
This week Internet Monitor dives into AdBlock's latest online campaign, Anonymous' campaign against Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, the Court of Justice of the European Union, and lastly, updates in the Apple/FBI standoff.
This week, Internet Monitor examines the XcodeGhost malware that made it to the official Apple App Store, a possible cyber warfare agreement between China and the United States, Edward Snowden's thoughts on aliens, and Google's "Right to be Forgotten" problems in France.
This week, Internet Monitor examines the EU-US Umbrella Agreement, the backdoors found in some of Cisco's routers, Facebook's controversial (dis)like button, Snowden, the Kremlin, and New Hampshire's Kilton Library.
This week, Internet Monitor checks out Belgium's not so private problem with Facebook's privacy policies, what can no longer be read on Reddit, Pakistan's abandoned plan to tax the Internet, Chinese efforts to hack away at American federal employees' records, and Wikimedia's decision to encrypt all of its sites.
This week, Internet Monitor looks at censorship on the 26th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre, the case of a Saudi Arabian blogger's arrest, and more.