Apple TV execs dismiss introducing an ad tier, buying Warner Bros. Discovery

Focused on original content

Another obvious way to grow Apple TV is through more subscribers. With talk of Warner Bros. Discovery considering a sale, it’s worth wondering if Apple TV may try to grow through acquisition. But the execs Screen International spoke with seemed focused on building out Apple TV’s library with originals. Cue noted that “at least in the timeframe that we’re thinking about right now, we’re not looking at licensing any content or adding anything to our service.”

“We’re building an all-original services; we’re not building on the back of pre-existing IP or library,” Jamie Erlicht, one of Apple’s heads of worldwide video, said.

More directly, when asked if Apple might buy Warner Bros., A24, or Disney, Cue pointed out that Apple hasn’t historically done “a lot of major acquisitions.”

“We do very small acquisitions in general, not related to Apple TV, so I don’t see that happening because we like what we’re doing,” Cue said.

Since its 2019 debut, some have questioned whether Apple TV is an authentic attempt to improve streaming options for customers, or if Apple TV is a “vanity project,” as Screen International put it, or if the service is merely a tool for getting people to buy other Apple products. Naturally, the interviewed executives claimed that the service is built on a commitment to distributing unique and premium shows and movies.

The interview provided more insight into how Apple TV leadership defines the latter. Zack Van Amburg, one of Apple’s heads of worldwide video, said:

A core tenet of everything Apple does is the notion that humanity needs to be at the center of it, and that’s everything from app design to hardware engineering, to everything in between. We try to think a little more deeply about that.

Our shows and our movies tend to be about the emotional experience, the stakes involved, even when we’re doing a comedy.

https://arstechnica.com/apple/2025/11/apple-has-no-plans-to-bring-ads-to-apple-tv/




Apple releases iOS 26.1, macOS 26.1, other updates with Liquid Glass controls and more

After several weeks of testing, Apple has released the final versions of the 26.1 update to its various operating systems. Those include iOS, iPadOS, macOS, watchOS, tvOS, visionOS, and the HomePod operating system, all of which switched to a new unified year-based version numbering system this fall.

This isn’t the first update that these operating systems have gotten since they were released in September, but it is the first to add significant changes and tweaks to existing features, addressing the early complaints and bugs that inevitably come with any major operating system update.

One of the biggest changes across most of the platforms is a new translucency control for Liquid Glass that tones it down without totally disabling the effect. Users can stay with the default Clear look to see the clearer, glassier look that allows more of the contents underneath Liquid Glass to show through, or the new Tinted look to get a more opaque background that shows only vague shapes and colors to improve readability.

For iPad users, the update re-adds an updated version of the Slide Over multitasking mode, which uses quick swipes to summon and dismiss an individual app on top of the apps you’re already using. The iPadOS 26 version looks a little different and includes some functional changes compared to the previous version—it’s harder to switch which app is being used in Slide Over mode, but the Slide Over window can now be moved and resized just like any other iPadOS 26 app window.

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/11/apple-releases-ios-26-1-macos-26-1-other-updates-with-liquid-glass-controls-and-more/




Reports suggest Apple is already pulling back on the iPhone Air

Apple’s iPhone Air was the company’s most interesting new iPhone this year, at least insofar as it was the one most different from previous iPhones. We came away impressed by its size and weight in our review. But early reports suggest that its novelty might not be translating into sales success.

A note from analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, whose supply chain sources are often accurate about Apple’s future plans, said yesterday that demand for the iPhone Air “has fallen short of expectations” and that “both shipments and production capacity” were being scaled back to account for the lower-than-expected demand.

Kuo’s note is backed up by reports from other analysts at Mizuho Securities (via MacRumors) and Nikkei Asia. Both of these reports say that demand for the iPhone 17 and 17 Pro models remains strong, indicating that this is just a problem for the iPhone Air and not a wider slowdown caused by tariffs or other external factors.

The standard iPhone, the regular-sized iPhone Pro, and the big iPhone Pro have all been mainstays in Apple’s lineup, but the company has had a harder time coming up with a fourth phone that sells well enough to stick around. The small-screened iPhone mini and the large-screened iPhone Plus were each discontinued after two generations.

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/10/early-indicators-analyst-reports-suggest-apples-iphone-air-isnt-taking-off/




Ma l’iPhone si fa sempre in Cina? Trump lo sa?

Il CEO di Apple, Tim Cook, ha promesso che l’azienda continuerà ad aumentare gli investimenti in Cina. Lo ha riferito il ministro cinese dell’Industria e dell’Informazione, Li Lecheng, durante la visita in corso del manager statunitense a Pechino.

Il ministro cinese Li ha invitato Apple a rafforzare la collaborazione con i fornitori locali, mentre Cook ha confermato l’impegno a intensificare la cooperazione con la Cina. Il Paese è il più grande mercato di Apple al di fuori degli Stati Uniti e resta un polo produttivo strategico per la società di Cupertino.

Le dichiarazioni arrivano mentre il produttore dell’iPhone cerca di aggirare i dazi imposti da Washington sulle spedizioni provenienti da Paesi come la Cina e l’India – dove si concentrano i principali stabilimenti produttivi – aumentando gli investimenti negli Stati Uniti fino a 600 miliardi di dollari nei prossimi quattro anni.

Durante la visita, ha scritto Bloomberg, Cook ha incontrato figure di spicco dell’industria tecnologica e ha annunciato una donazione all’Università Tsinghua, una delle più prestigiose del Paese. Nei giorni precedenti era stato a Shanghai, dove ha visitato l’Apple Store, incontrato sviluppatori di videogiochi locali e il designer delle popolari bambole Labubu, che gli ha anche regalato un esemplare personalizzato.

Cook ha inoltre confermato che l’iPhone Air sarà in vendita in Cina dal 22 ottobre, dopo un ritardo dovuto a questioni regolatorie.

Tim Cook non abbandona la Cina, il motivo? Gli ingegneri

Nonostante la volontà di Trump di riportare la produzione negli Stati Uniti, la realtà è che Apple continua a considerare la Cina il cuore pulsante della propria filiera. Cupertino sta cercando di diversificare la catena produttiva spostando parte della manifattura in Vietnam e India, ma con risultati altalenanti: Foxconn, uno dei principali fornitori, ha recentemente richiamato ingegneri cinesi dalle fabbriche di iPhone in India, segno che il modello produttivo cinese resta, per ora, insostituibile.

Tim Cook ha spiegato in una recente intervista che Apple produce in Cina non per il basso costo della manodopera — perché non è più il Paese dei salari minimi come anni fa — ma per le competenze tecniche straordinarie che si concentrano lì. “In Cina – ha detto – ci sono tantissime competenze in un unico posto. Le persone che lavorano nella filiera hanno una formazione solida, spesso anche umanistica che agli ingegneri americani manca, e forse è anche per questo che sanno risolvere problemi complessi con metodo e creatività”.

Leggi le altre notizie sull’home page di Key4biz

https://www.key4biz.it/ma-liphone-si-fa-sempre-in-cina-trump-lo-sa/550645/




Apple si oppone alla verifica dell’età per il download delle app


In un nuovo post sul proprio blog, Apple ha espresso i suoi dubbi su una legge che rende obbligatoria la verifica dell’età per tutti coloro che vogliono scaricare applicazioni dallo Store o effettuare acquisti in-app.

La nuova legge – SB2420 – entrerà in vigore in Texas a partire dal 1° gennaio 2026 e prevede che chiunque voglia creare un account Apple (ma anche Google) a confermare di avere più di 18 anni; per fare ciò, gli sviluppatori e gli operatori dei marketplace di app dovranno di fatto raccogliere informazioni sull’età dei nuovi utenti, ovvero tramite caricamento di carte d’identità e dati dei genitori o tutori. 

Apple verifica età

Pur condividendo l’obiettivo di rafforzare la sicurezza dei minori online, temiamo che SB2420 vada a impattare la privacy degli utenti richiedendo la raccolta di informazioni sensibili e di identificazione personale per scaricare qualsiasi applicazione, anche se un utente vuole semplicemente controllare il meteo o i risultati sportivi” ha affermato la compagnia.

La critica mossa da Apple sulla verifica dell’età è infatti relativa all’applicazione indiscriminata della legge. Per la compagnia non si tratta però soltanto di un problema di privacy, ma di un peso aggiuntivo per gli sviluppatori: quando la legge verrà definitivamente approvata, tutti gli account Apple di persone sotto i 18 anni saranno obbligati a far parte di in un gruppo “In famiglia” e saranno i genitori o i tutori a dover confermare tutti i download, gli acquisti e le transazioni; ciò “impatterà gli sviluppatori che dovranno implementare nuove funzionalità e modificare il comportamento delle proprie applicazioni per essere a norma di legge“.

Questa disposizione non rimarrà confinata in Texas, ma diventerà legge anche in Utah e Louisiana nel corso del 2026, e potenzialmente anche in altri stati U.S.A.

Secondo Apple, sarebbe opportuno che la legge introducesse l’obbligo del controllo dell’età solo per quelle applicazioni che sono classificate come potenzialmente non adatte ai minori.

In ogni caso, per supportare gli sviluppatori, Apple ha annunciato l’introduzione di nuove funzionalità che facilitano l’implementazione dei controlli di età. Gli sviluppatori possono già integrare l’API “Declared Age Range” ed entro fine anno saranno disponibili nuove feature che permettono di riottenere il consenso dei genitori in caso di aggiornamento delle app.

Condividi l’articolo



Articoli correlati

Altro in questa categoria


https://www.securityinfo.it/2025/10/14/apple-si-oppone-alla-verifica-delleta-per-il-download-delle-app/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=apple-si-oppone-alla-verifica-delleta-per-il-download-delle-app




Apple Bug Bounty Update: Top Payout $2 Million, $35 Million Paid to Date

Apple on Friday announced significant updates to its bug bounty program and the company is now offering up to $2 million for complex exploit chains. 

Since the launch of its public bug bounty program in 2020, Apple has awarded a total of more than $35 million to over 800 security researchers. Multiple hackers earned $500,000 for their work, Apple said.

The tech giant recently unveiled Memory Integrity Enforcement (MIE), an always-on memory-safety protection for iPhones designed to combat sophisticated attacks such as the ones conducted by mercenary spyware vendors. 

Apple believes these spyware attacks are the only ones that actually pose a significant threat to its customers and the company now wants to boost the security of its products even further against sophisticated attacks. 

It’s doing this by harnessing offensive security talent from outside the company, specifically by significantly increasing bug bounties for vulnerabilities such as the ones that would be leveraged in the exploit chains of mercenary spyware attacks.

Specifically, the top reward for a zero-click exploit chain that achieves remote device compromise, has been increased from $1 million to $2 million. Apple pointed out that this is the base pay and researchers can in theory get as much as $5 million if they earn bonuses for Lockdown Mode bypasses and vulnerabilities discovered in beta software. 

Apple noted in a call with reporters on Thursday that for someone to earn a $5 million reward is not easy or likely, but it is theoretically possible.

Apple is also significantly increasing bug bounty payouts for an application sandbox escape (from $150k to $500k), attacks requiring physical access to a locked device (from $250k to $500k), wireless attacks requiring physical proximity (from $250k to $1M), and remote hacking that requires one-click user interaction (from $250k to $1M).

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

The company has also announced that one-click attacks through the web browser, which have to bypass its WebKit protections, will be rewarded with up to $300,000 if they can achieve code execution with a sandbox escape. The reward can increase up to $1 million if the exploit chain is taken even further to achieve unsigned code execution with arbitrary entitlements. 

The tech giant is also boosting rewards for categories where no exploit has been demonstrated to date, such as a Gatekeeper bypass on macOS ($100,000) and unauthorized iCloud access ($1 million). 

The new payouts will go into effect in November 2025. 

Apple on Friday also introduced a concept that involves flags, similar to capture-the-flag (CTF) competitions. These so-called ‘Target Flags’ are meant to make it easier for researchers to objectively demonstrate their findings and to know what reward they should expect for their report. 

“When researchers demonstrate security issues using Target Flags, the specific flag that’s captured objectively demonstrates a given level of capability — for example, register control, arbitrary read/write, or code execution — and directly correlates to the reward amount, making the award determination more transparent than ever,” Apple explained

“Because Target Flags can be programmatically verified by Apple as part of submitted findings, researchers who submit eligible reports with Target Flags will receive notification of their bounty award immediately upon our validation of the captured flag,” it added.

Target Flags are supported on iOS, iPadOS, macOS, visionOS, watchOS, and tvOS.

Apple also announced that exceptional research will continue to receive bonuses, and it has decided that even low-impact vulnerabilities may be rewarded with $1,000 to encourage researchers to continue reporting their findings.

Related: Apple Seeks Researchers for 2026 iPhone Security Program

Related: Apple Updates iOS and macOS to Prevent Malicious Font Attacks

Related: Apple Sends Fresh Wave of Spyware Notifications to French Users

https://www.securityweek.com/apple-bug-bounty-update-top-payout-now-2-million-35-million-paid-to-date/




Apple and Google reluctantly comply with Texas age verification law

Apple yesterday announced a plan to comply with a Texas age verification law and warned that changes required by the law will reduce privacy for app users.

“Beginning January 1, 2026, a new state law in Texas—SB2420—introduces age assurance requirements for app marketplaces and developers,” Apple said yesterday in a post for developers. “While we share the goal of strengthening kids’ online safety, we are concerned that SB2420 impacts the privacy of users by requiring the collection of sensitive, personally identifiable information to download any app, even if a user simply wants to check the weather or sports scores.”

The Texas App Store Accountability Act requires app stores to verify users’ ages and imposes restrictions on those under 18. Apple said that developers will have “to adopt new capabilities and modify behavior within their apps to meet their obligations under the law.”

Apple’s post noted that similar laws will take effect later in 2026 in Utah and Louisiana. Google also recently announced plans for complying with the three state laws and said the new requirements reduce user privacy.

“While we have user privacy and trust concerns with these new verification laws, Google Play is designing APIs, systems, and tools to help you meet your obligations,” Google told developers in an undated post.

The Utah law is scheduled to take effect May 7, 2026, while the Louisiana law will take effect July 1, 2026. The Texas, Utah, and Louisiana “laws impose significant new requirements on many apps that may need to provide age appropriate experiences to users in these states,” Google said. “These requirements include ingesting users’ age ranges and parental approval status for significant changes from app stores and notifying app stores of significant changes.”

New features for Texas

Apple and Google both announced new features to help developers comply.

“Once this law goes into effect, users located in Texas who create a new Apple Account will be required to confirm whether they are 18 years or older,” Apple said. “All new Apple Accounts for users under the age of 18 will be required to join a Family Sharing group, and parents or guardians will need to provide consent for all App Store downloads, app purchases, and transactions using Apple’s In-App Purchase system by the minor.”

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/10/apple-and-google-reluctantly-comply-with-texas-age-verification-law/




OpenAI mocks Musk’s math in suit over iPhone/ChatGPT integration

And most glaringly, Apple noted that xAI is not a rival or consumer in the smartphone industry, where it alleges competition is being harmed. Apple urged the court to reject Musk’s theory that Apple is incentivized to boost OpenAI to prevent xAI’s ascent in building a “super app” that would render smartphones obsolete. If Musk’s super app dream is even possible, Apple argued, it’s at least a decade off, insisting that as-yet-undeveloped apps should not serve as the basis for blocking Apple’s measured plan to better serve customers with sophisticated chatbot integration.

“Antitrust laws do not require that, and for good reason: imposing such a rule on businesses would slow innovation, reduce quality, and increase costs, all ultimately harming the very consumers the antitrust laws are meant to protect,” Apple argued.

Musk’s weird smartphone market claim, explained

Apple alleged that Musk’s “grievance” can be “reduced to displeasure that Apple has not yet ‘integrated with any other generative AI chatbots’ beyond ChatGPT, such as those created by xAI, Google, and Anthropic.”

In a footnote, the smartphone giant noted that by xAI’s logic, Musk’s social media platform X “may be required to integrate all other chatbots—including ChatGPT—on its own social media platform.”

But antitrust law doesn’t work that way, Apple argued, urging the court to reject xAI’s claims of alleged market harms that “rely on a multi-step chain of speculation on top of speculation.” As Apple summarized, xAI contends that “if Apple never integrated ChatGPT,” xAI could win in both chatbot and smartphone markets, but only if:

1. Consumers would choose to send additional prompts to Grok (rather than other generative AI chatbots).
2. The additional prompts would result in Grok achieving scale and quality it could not otherwise achieve.
3. As a result, the X app would grow in popularity because it is integrated with Grok.
4. X and xAI would therefore be better positioned to build so-called “super apps” in the future, which the complaint defines as “multi-functional” apps that offer “social connectivity and messaging, financial services, e-commerce, and entertainment.”
5. Once developed, consumers might choose to use X’s “super app” for various functions.
6. “Super apps” would replace much of the functionality of smartphones and consumers would care less about the quality of their physical phones and rely instead on these hypothetical “super apps.”
7. Smartphone manufacturers would respond by offering more basic models of smartphones with less functionality.
8. iPhone users would decide to replace their iPhones with more “basic smartphones” with “super apps.”

Apple insisted that nothing in its OpenAI deal prevents Musk from building his super apps, while noting that from integrating Grok into X, Musk understands that integration of a single chatbot is a “major undertaking” that requires “substantial investment.” That “concession” alone “underscores the massive resources Apple would need to devote to integrating every AI chatbot into Apple Intelligence,” while navigating potential user safety risks.

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/10/openai-mocks-musks-math-in-suit-over-iphone-chatgpt-integration/




Apple Updates iOS and macOS to Prevent Malicious Font Attacks

Apple on Monday released a fresh round of security updates that address a single medium-severity vulnerability affecting both iOS and macOS.

Tracked as CVE-2025-43400, the security defect is described as an out-of-bounds write issue in the operating system’s FontParser component that could lead to a denial-of-service (DoS) condition or memory corruption.

“Processing a maliciously crafted font may lead to unexpected app termination or corrupt process memory,” Apple explains.

According to advisories from the Hong Kong CERT and Akaoma Cybersecurity, the vulnerability can be exploited remotely, without privileges, although user interaction is required.

“The flaw could be triggered by a malicious font delivered via a document, email attachment, or web content, and may lead to unexpected application termination or memory corruption,” Jamf senior security strategy manager Adam Boynton said.

To resolve the bug, the Cupertino-based company has rolled out updates for the recently released iOS 26 and macOS 26, but also for older versions of its mobile and desktop platforms.

The updates are rolling out as iOS 26.0.1 and iPadOS 26.0.1, macOS Tahoe 26.0.1, iOS 18.7.1 and iPadOS 18.7.1, macOS Sequoia 15.7.1, and macOS Sonoma 14.8.1. The fixes were also included in visionOS 26.0.1.

As SANS Institute’s Johannes Ullrich points out, Apple typically rolls out minor system updates shortly after releasing major platform iterations, and the fresh update should not come as a surprise.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

“It is typical for Apple to release a ‘.0.1’ update soon after releasing a major new operating system. These updates typically fix various functional issues, but this time, they also fix a security vulnerability,” Ullrich notes.

Apple makes no mention of this vulnerability being exploited in the wild, but users are advised to update their devices as soon as possible. Additional information can be found on Apple’s security releases page.

“Because the issue has the potential to cause service disruptions or undermine system stability, we strongly recommend updating to iOS 26.0.1 at your earliest convenience. Organizations should ensure fleet devices are kept current, enforce compliance, and monitor for OS update rollout status,” Boynton said.

Related: Apple Rolls Out iOS 26, macOS Tahoe 26 With Patches for Over 50 Vulnerabilities

Related: Ex-WhatsApp Employee Sues Meta Over Vulnerabilities, Retaliation

Related: Rethinking Success in Security: Why Climbing the Corporate Ladder Isn’t Always the Goal

Related: North Korean Hackers Target macOS Users

https://www.securityweek.com/apple-updates-ios-and-macos-to-prevent-malicious-font-attacks/




Apple, Google, Booking.com e Bing, l’UE vuole sapere in che modo ci tutelano dalle frodi online

Frodi online: richiesta di informazioni a Apple App Store, Booking.com, Bing, Google Play e Google Search

Decine di milioni di utenti europei, ogni giorno, si affidano a piattaforme web e motori di ricerca per lavorare, studiare, intrattenersi e cercare informazioni. Strumenti ampiamente utilizzati dai criminali online per trovare le loro vittime. Per questo motivo, Bruxelles intende capire in che modo le grandi società tecnologiche che forniscono questi servizi ci tutelano dai rischi legati alle truffe finanziarie e alle frodi online in generale.

La Commissione europea ha inviato richieste di informazioni ad Apple App Store, Booking.com, Bing, Google Play e Google Search proprio per capire in che modo identificano e gestiscono azioni criminali che potrebbero colpire questa enorme massa critica di utenti di internet dei Paesi dell’Unione.

Si tratta di un passo essenziale per proteggere gli utenti in tutta l’Ue da alcune di queste pratiche e per garantire che anche le piattaforme svolgano il loro ruolo“, ha dichiarato ai giornalisti in conferenza stampa il portavoce per gli Affari digitali dell’UE, Thomas Regnier.

Un’iniziativa della Commissione che è stata comunicata nel giorno in cui il vice presidente esecutivo per la Sovranità tecnologica, la sicurezza e la democrazia, Henna Virkkunen ha incontrato il nuovo ambasciatore degli Stati Uniti presso l’UE, Andrew Puzder.

L’incontro tra il vicepresidente esecutivo Virkkunen e il nuovo ambasciatore USA Puzder

In questi ultimi tempi, come ben sappiamo, i rapporti diplomatici tra Stati Uniti e Unione europea si sono fatti molto tesi a causa delle politiche commerciali decise dal Presidente americano Donald Trump, con rilevanti ricadute sul modo in cui l’innovazione tecnologica è regolamentata sulle due sponde dell’Atlantico.

Abbiamo discusso dell’importanza di proteggere la libertà di parola, un settore in cui l’Ue e gli Stati Uniti devono continuare il dialogo e chiarire eventuali malintesi. Un altro punto di discussione è stato l’importante programma di semplificazione dell’Ue, per garantire che la nostra legislazione, compresa la regolamentazione digitale, sia attuata in modo da sostenere l’innovazione e le imprese”, ha spiegato in un post social Virkkunen.

Questo incontro, ha aggiunto la Commissaria europea, “sottolinea il nostro impegno a lavorare insieme in modo cooperativo attraverso l’Atlantico su tecnologia, innovazione, sicurezza e sicurezza informatica“.

Le frodi tramite app e gli annunci esca

Per Apple App Store e Google Play, la richiesta di informazioni dettagliate sulla valutazione dei pericoli include applicazioni fraudolente che imitano app bancarie, di investimento o di trading legittime.

Per Booking.com, riguarda annunci di alloggi falsi progettati per indurre gli utenti a effettuare pagamenti che non si traducono mai in una prenotazione effettiva.

La verificata dell’identità e il ruolo degli annunci pubblicitari

La Commissione chiede inoltre ad Apple App Store, Google Play e Booking.com come verificano l’identità delle aziende che utilizzano i loro servizi, in base alle norme “Conosci il tuo cliente“, che possono aiutarli a identificare entità sospette prima che causino danni.

Per Bing e Google Search, la richiesta riguarda link e annunci pubblicitari che indirizzano gli utenti a siti web fraudolenti, spesso causando perdite finanziarie.

Il DSA chiede alle piattaforme e ai motori di ricerca di valutare e mitigare i rischi online

Ai sensi del Digital Services Act, le piattaforme online e i motori di ricerca di grandi dimensioni sono tenuti a valutare e mitigare i rischi sistemici associati alla diffusione di contenuti illegali e alla tutela dei consumatori.

Bruxelles chiede inoltre chiede alle società sopra menzionate di fornire dettagli sui propri archivi pubblicitari, ovvero i database in cui le informazioni su tutti gli annunci devono essere archiviate e rese accessibili. Gli archivi consentono alle autorità di regolamentazione, ai ricercatori e al pubblico di individuare annunci fraudolenti e modelli utilizzati dai truffatori.

Microsoft, Google e Booking dicono la loro

In risposta alla richiesta della Commissione, si legge su Le Monde, un portavoce di Microsoft ha affermato che l’azienda è “impegnata a creare esperienze online sicure e continuerà a collaborare con la Commissione europea“.

Google ha dichiarato di aver bloccato centinaia di milioni di “risultati fraudolenti nelle ricerche girnaliere“, mentre Booking ha detto che avrebbe avviato sul tema “un dialogo costruttivo” con Bruxelles, aggiungendo che tra il 2023 e il 2024, l’azienda ha assistito a “un calo di prenotazioni false legate al phishing rilevate e bloccate da 1,5 milioni a 250.000″.

Leggi le altre notizie sull’home page di Key4biz

https://www.key4biz.it/apple-google-booking-com-e-bing-lue-vuole-sapere-in-che-modo-ci-tutelano-dalle-frodi-online/547775/