10 Things You Should Know About Facebook's New Privacy Policy; Adobe BackPedals, Will Patch Photoshop, Illustrator; Cloud Services Boost SMB Security, Says Microsoft Survey; Apple's OS X, Safari Updates Improve OS X

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May 16, 2012, 7:00:00 AM5/16/12
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  Security Watch May 16, 2012
 
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10 Things You Should Know About Facebook's New Privacy Policy
Facebook updated its privacy policy last Friday, clarifying what it does with your data, while also blurring the limits of what it can do with your information. Here are the key changes you should know.

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Adobe BackPedals, Will Patch Photoshop, Illustrator
After a hue and cry from outraged users and security experts alike, Adobe has reversed direction and promised free patches for older versions of Photoshop, Illustrator, and Flash Professional to close eight critical vulnerabilities.

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Cloud Services Boost SMB Security, Says Microsoft Survey
Small and mid-sized businesses leery of the cloud because of security concerns may take comfort in a recent survey from Microsoft's Trustworthy Computing indicating the cloud may actually strengthen their security posture.

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Apple's OS X, Safari Updates Improve OS X Security
After years of tight-fisted control over patch releases, Apple hands the reigns back to Oracle and Adobe.

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Review: Password Genie
Password Genie performs all the expected tasks of a password manager and handles sites that many competitors can't. It also stores personal data, but stops short of using that personal data to fill Web forms for you.

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DashLane Announces Premium Edition, Adds Points and Badges
Password manager Dashlane made its impressive debut just a few weeks ago, but this week's release of version 1.1 adds significant new features.

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DNSCrypt for Windows Secures the "Last Mile"
Some cybercriminals set up fraudulent DNS servers that send your browser to malicious sites, but the new DNSCrypt for Windows service from secure DNS provider OpenDNS protects that last mile.

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Questions, comments, tips about potential viruses, worms, vulnerabilities? Send them here:


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