Tag Archives: corona virus

Remote workers need to improve security measures

 

Security firm Avast provides tips on how people can work safely from their homes during an epidemic.

Technological support and security measures are one of the ways organizations and their employees can protect their jobs when they start working remotely during the COVID-19 outbreak. While digital security firm Avast has also been working to help more companies protect their employees from coronavirus worldwide, they have made some suggestions on how people can work safely from their homes during the epidemic.

Remote workers need to improve security measures

Avast CISO shares some information about how employees can protect their devices from virtual viruses while protecting themselves from physical coronaviruses:

Corporate security measures

According to an Avast survey, an average of 49.75% of people worldwide said they did not receive the technological support or expertise they needed from their employers while working from home or in a public place. Avast CISO says that companies that are preparing to send the workforce home need to provide the support they need to work remotely, and take the following steps:

Make sure employees use pre-approved laptops and smartphones to access corporate material, including emails, tools and documents. Business-grade security solutions must be installed on these devices and checked, if any, by the company’s IT department.
Equip employees with a phone number list so they can reach IT teams or other responsible people when they have IT issues.
Inform employees about hardware, software and services that are not published by the company but can help you share your files with colleagues in special situations.

Set basic rules for those who work with personal hardware, such as printers, while working from home.
Provide employees with VPN connections that they can use to protect their communications.
Require two-factor authentication wherever possible to add an extra layer of protection to the accounts.
Instead of ensuring that employees have access to the entire company network, make sure they have limited access rights and can only connect to the services they need for their specific tasks.

Measures that employees can take

According to the Avast CISO, there are basic measures that remote workers can take to strengthen the security of their home networks, which will make working from home safer.

Employees must log in to their router’s administrative interface to change the device’s login credentials, and also change their Wi-Fi passwords with a unique and strong password of at least 16 characters.

According to the Avast survey, 37.1% of global participants do not know that they have a web management interface where they can log in to view and change their router’s settings.

Avast recommends that users check whether port forwarding and UPnP are enabled in their router settings and disable them if they are not used intentionally.

Networks are only as secure as their weakest connections, so it’s important to make sure all devices connected to the network are secure, as there may be potential gateways for cybercriminals to access other devices connected to the home network.

Another point is that employees should look for coronavirus-related phishing emails, including spear phishing emails. These emails may appear to come from the company and may include attachments, links, or a request. It is important that users verify the sender’s e-mail address before communicating any attachment, link or request, or contact the sender through a different channel to confirm that the message was sent from them.

How china uses Drones, car-thermometers and big data to control the corona virus

The officials are also using big data from public transport, telephone operators or even pharmacies, which in some cities are required to register the identity of those who buy certain drugs to detect possible infections.Drones that fly over cities to fumigate and remember that it is mandatory to wear a mask, thermometer cars that patrol the streets and mobile applications where the closest cases are reported: China has used technology like never before to stop the coronavirus outbreak .

For two months now, many citizens of the Asian country have lived, worked and made their purchases almost virtually while the authorities monitor their movements through the data that is stored in QR codes , which indicate whether a person is at risk of contract the virus or if you need quarantine.

In fact, to enter certain places, sometimes even in their own home, citizens have no choice but to get one of these codes with their mobile phones, through popular payment platforms such as Alipay or messaging platforms like WeChat, developed by the giants. Alibaba and Tencent, respectively.

They are already being used in more than 300 cities in the country, and Tencent assures that it already covers more than 800 million citizens.

There is still no national standard and each locality sets different standards, but in Hangzhou (east), getting a green color code means being able to continue living a practically normal life and using all public services; yellow implies a quarantine of seven days, and red, a fourteen.

To get one, you have to answer questions such as whether you have been in the affected areas in the last 14 days, if you have been in contact with deceased people.

Micro data fever

In addition, the authorities are also using big data from public transport, telephone operators or even pharmacies, which in some cities are required to register the identity of those who buy certain drugs to detect possible infections.

Sources close to one of these platforms explained to Efe that they only act as an intermediary between the applications – developed and operated by local governments – and the end user, and that they do not have access to the data collected.

They added that it is “clearly indicated” in the terms of use that it is a service operated by the municipal government and that, to obtain a code, the user must accept that the data be shared with the authorities.

They note that if someone does not agree with this use, they can choose to reject the conditions and not use the application.

Of course, in various cities it is already mandatory to teach a green code to be able to use services such as the subway or, for example, enter some supermarkets, while in some neighborhoods and residential complexes there are control points at which the authorities review them.

Multi-use drones against the virus

Meanwhile, the local press boasts about how China is using its cutting- edge technology to mitigate the outbreak, highlighting news such as the launch of Baojun brand cars equipped with infrared temperature measurement systems, the Global newspaper reported a few days ago. Times.

These cars can accurately recognize people’s faces and measure temperatures from two meters away, with a margin of error of 0.2 degrees Celsius, according to the newspaper.

If someone is found to have a fever, the vehicle issues a warning and points a sensor at the person with the symptom.

And not only cars: several types of robots that are assisting in hospitals, 3D printers -to make molds of the much-needed masks- and even drones that spray from the air to reduce the virus are also being used in the fight against the virus risk of infections.

Drones are also being used to deliver packages, alert authorities of health policies as a loudspeaker and to bring QR codes closer to drivers while they wait at tolls, says the tech magazine Abacus.

Equipped with remote thermal sensors, they also take the temperature from the sky and report possible fever charts on the spot, although some citizens have reported that their diagnoses are not entirely rigorous, the publication adds.

This magazine also ensures that companies like Baidu are publishing maps online where the cases closest to the displayed location are reported and that others like SenseTime are trying to adapt their facial recognition systems to identify (and report) people who do not Wear masks in public places in an effort to ensure their use.

Privacy concern

the use of “big data” has caused some concern among Chinese Internet users.

However, the directive makes no specific mention of its future use, but some provinces like Yunnan (south) have promised that they will destroy all the data collected once the epidemic ends.

And all this happens at a time when the number of people hooked on the Internet continues to grow: online video viewing has increased by 24.3 million, according to Abacus, while applications designed to improve work efficiency have earned nearly 40 million more daily users since the start of the outbreak.

Not surprisingly, e-commerce, telecommuting, remote education and digital entertainment are the clear winners of this crisis, highlighting the rise of online broadcasting of applications such as Kuaishou or Douyin (known internationally as TikTok), where “Streamers” get more attention than ever.

Among the e-commerce delivery platforms, Taobao, one of the largest in the country, has once again created a trend with an application, “Live”, in which farmers show their products to customers directly and interact with them.

New regulation for internet content

Another news that seems to have gone unnoticed these days, dragged by the tide of contagions and deaths from the coronavirus, is the entry into force of a new regulatory code for Internet content, active since last day 1.

One of his articles asks to avoid “commenting inappropriately” on natural disasters, serious accidents and other catastrophes, and recalls that “it is illegal to publish information that spreads rumors and disrupts the economic and social order.”

Although its wording dates back to December 20, a month before the national emergency was declared, some of its provisions could be used by the authorities to control (even more) the flow of information related to the epidemic.

According to the academic Séverine Arséne, associate professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and author of the book “Internet and politics in China”, the new regulation gathers measures already underway but adds details such as the so-called “negative” or “positive” content lists “and clarifies the responsibilities of users, content service platforms and local and provincial authorities.

In any case, Arséne stresses that “after a period of relative uncertainty about what could be published about the coronavirus, the level of censorship has clearly increased, especially with regard to the political messages of the leaders.”