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- Category: Technology
Read more: Netflix is down: Streaming service crashes for users across the UK and US
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Read more: Teen, 17, develops irreversible ‘popcorn lung’ after vaping for just five months
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Read more: Google Assistant can now book cinema tickets for you - here's how
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BlackBerry has unveiledseveral updates to its enterprise mobility security platform, offering three new UEMpeoducts aimed at enabling secure access to tools, applications and files based on a zero-trust architecture.
The trio of new suites are add-ons to BlackBerry's flagship Enterprise Mobility Suite, aimed at enhancing productivity, collaboration and workforce agility.
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Read more: Blackberry refreshes its UEM suite, focuses on zero-trust access
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I don't know if you've read much news this week, but it seems the sky is falling and we're all terribly doomed.
No, I'm not talking about that news — as usual, that's another column for another publication — but rather the news that a security flaw in some Android camera apps could turn our phones into privacy-plundering spy portals and bring an end to human life as we know it.
I mean, have you seen some of these headlines?!
- "Hundreds of millions of Android phone cameras can be hijacked by spyware"
- "Android flaw lets rogue apps take photos, record video even if your phone is locked"
- "An Android flaw lets apps secretly access people's cameras and upload the videos to an external server"
Holy hibiscus, Henry! Even I'm trembling from all of that, and I know it's a bunch of misguided, sensationalized hooey.
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Read more: The 5 true takeaways from Android's camera vulnerability circus
Write comment (91 Comments)At last, we have a description of the mysterious shutdown-blocking G— and a fix for MicrosoftG-generating bug coming in the next version of Win10, commonly called 20H1.
If you look online, you&ll see hundreds (if not thousands) of reports about Win10 shutdown getting blocked by a mysterious app called, simply, G.

Most people assume ita virus, some other sort of malware or a harbinger of doom. In fact, itnothing of the sort. Ita bug in the way Windows reports a specific kind of hang, and the bug has been fixed in the latest versions of Win10 20H1.
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Read more: Mysterious app keeps you from shutting down — or does it
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