Pular para o conteúdo principal

Visitas a sites e apps de alto risco crescem 161% durante pandemia

Tráfego para sites de conteúdo adulto aumentou em 600%
Tráfego para sites de conteúdo adulto aumentou em 600% Freepik

Um relatório divulgado pela Netskope, empresa norte-americana de softwares, na terça-feira (4), aponta que houve um aumento de 161% nas visitas a sites e a aplicativos de alto risco no período de 1º janeiro a 30 junho deste ano. Entre os principais deles, estão os sites de conteúdo adulto, cujo tráfego cresceu em 600%.

A ocorrência estaria atrelada ao fato de que o número de trabalhadores remotos, e consequentemente, o uso pessoal de dispositivos, praticamente dobrou devido a pandemia da covid-19, chegando a 97%.

“A mudança abrupta para o trabalho remoto em 2020 provocou uma onda de choque nas organizações, pois as pessoas vivenciam uma mistura entre trabalho e vida pessoal como nunca ocorreu antes”, diz Ray Canzanese, diretor de pesquisa de ameaças da Netskope.

Em paralelo ao deslocamento do local de trabalho, a Netskope destaca que houve um aumento de 80% no uso de aplicativos de colaboração, visto que os funcionários remotos buscam permanecer conectados com seus colegas. Nas grandes empresas, o número total de aplicativos em nuvens usados aumentou para mais de 7 mil, em média.

Durante o levantamento, a NetsKope descobriu também que 7% dos usuários carregaram dados corporativos confidenciais para instâncias pessoais de apps em nuvem. O uso de informações sigilosas dessa maneira coloca em risco a empresa e aumenta os riscos de roubos de informações. 

Cazanese destaca também que é fundamental que as organizações garantam acesso seguro à nuvem e à web por meio de métodos como uma autenticação forte e controles de acesso, proteção de ameaças e de dados, acesso de rede zero trust a aplicativos privados em data centers e serviços de nuvem pública.

*Estagiária do R7 sob supervisão de Pablo Marques



Este texto foi publicado primeiro em http://noticias.r7.com/tecnologia-e-ciencia/visitas-a-sites-e-apps-de-alto-risco-crescem-161-durante-pandemia-05082020

Via RSS publicado em https://vitorolig.tumblr.com/post/625633991933968384

Postagens mais visitadas deste blog

Duke Kahanamoku reflects on surfing, Olympics, and old Hawaii in 1966 interview

Duke Kahanamoku is the most influential surfer of all time and is often hailed as the father of modern surfing. There is nearly no one questioning these titles. Recently, Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) Hawaii unveiled a never-before-seen interview with the legendary surfer and Olympic swimmer. In the 1966 episode of Pau Hana Years, a seminal Hawaii television program that aired on KHET-TV (now PBS Hawaii) for 16 years, running from 1966 until 1982, Bob Barker chats with Duke Kahanamoku, then 76. The conversation drifts from royal ancestry to Olympic lanes, from Hollywood sets to a surfboard shaped by hand, tracing the outline of a life that helped define modern surfing and Hawaii's public image in the 20th century. And if you know little about the man who dreamed of getting surfing into the Olympic Games, this is a precious piece of history. A name with history, worn casually The interview starts with Kahanamoku explaining that "Duke" is not a title but his giv...

The hydrodynamics of surfboard fins

Have you ever wondered why a surfboard fin looks like that? It is a single or a set of fixed blades or keels located under a board, near the tail, often no bigger than a hand. Yet that small surface is where much of the surfboard's behavior takes place. Speed, hold, looseness, and the feeling of control all trace back to how water moves around fins. The physics of surfboard fins falls under hydrodynamics, the study of how fluids behave in motion. So, according to science, they feature a shape designed to turn flowing water into several forces. Let's take a look at what's at stake when fins and water interact. Lift and the feeling of control One of the key variables in hydrodynamic terms involving surfboard fins is lift. When a surfer leans into a turn, the board tilts and the fins meet the water at an angle. The angle is enough to create a pressure difference between the two sides of the fin. Water speeds up on one side and slows on the other. The result is a sidewa...

How paddleboarding transforms your body and mind

Adventure is on our doorstep. With so many different bodies of water available to paddleboarders, from city canals to coastal routes, we can find adventure in places much closer to home than people might initially expect. According to the Canal and River Trust, 50 percent of people in England and Wales live within just eight kilometers of a canal or river, and eight million people live less than one kilometer away. I had lived within just a few kilometers of the Leeds and Liverpool Canal for years and never really explored it before stand-up paddleboarding (SUP) came into my life . The challenge created both a new perspective and a deeper love for where I lived and the areas which I passed through. On my coast-to-coast journey, I slept in my own bed for two nights as the route passed through my then hometown of Skipton, yet I felt I was on a grand journey of discovery. We are braver, stronger, and more resilient than we think. SUP not only helps us feel more connected to our va...