Armand, the RPost brand ambassador armadillo, here, coming to you from lovely Memphis, the birthplace of rock-and-roll and the locale for the late King of Rock’s family home, which has been in the news recently for all sorts of bad reasons.
Armand here coming to you from lovely Omaha (where the Indian food is surprisingly good by the way). Over the last few Tech Essentials, we highlighted how cybercriminals can understand precisely who, when, and how to target their victims.
Armand here, RPost’s product evangelist, writing from beautiful Charlotte. I’ve been discussing security and AI at the International Legal Technology Association conference along with some of my human RPost teammates, Gerlyn, Arianna, and Laura.
It’s Armand here, reporting to you live this week from the Louvre in Paris. Finally, I’m sent to a more desirable location, as the past few weeks I’ve been hanging out in empty lots, my mom’s basement, and having to box in a ring with a highly caffeinated LabRat.
Armand here again reporting for Tech Essentials. This week, I’m writing to you from…my mom’s basement. This is so that I can try and get in the mindset of a cybercriminal trying to leverage AI to perpetrate a sophisticated email scam.
If you’ve spent this past workweek furiously trying to figure where I’d wind up for this installment of Tech Essentials (and hopefully win your office betting pool), you can now put your pencils down because I’ve arrived in Pisa, Italy.
This week, I’m visiting you from a nondescript vacant lot on the outskirts of Pasadena, California. “Armand,” you ask. “You’re a long way from Davos! You’re usually in such posh locations when you report to us for Tech Essentials.”
If you’ve used the internet for anything, you’ve probably been faced with CAPTCHA, otherwise known as the Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart.
The pandemic lockdown that forced us all to work-from-home was a true shock to the system for most people who hadn’t worked a full day via videoconferencing.
Dr. Suess created that grey fuzzy-haired creature many years ago, the Grinch, who stole Christmas. While not quite as cute and fuzzy as the Grinch, today’s cybercriminals are posing as a similar sounding nefarious activity, the Glitch.
October 14, 2024
October 08, 2024
October 04, 2024
October 01, 2024
September 24, 2024