Cell services in November cost Canadians more for the first time since 2019

Canadians paid more for cellular services on a yearly basis for the first time in three years.

According to the November 2022 Consumer Price Index from Statistics Canada, prices increased by two percent compared to November 2021.

At that time, Canadians witnessed promotions across the industry for discounted phone plans and bonus data. Comparing the two years, fewer promotions were offered in November 2022.

The federal government achieved its target to reduce cellular prices by 25 percent earlier this year. However, Canadians are still paying some of the highest wireless bills in the world.

According to the 2021 annual telecom service price tracking study, the only country that paid more than Canadians for some wireless services was Japan.

With the pending Rogers-Shaw merger, concerns exist that costs will only continue to grow. It forms part of the Competition Bureau’s efforts to block the merger. Representatives from Rogers and Shaw have denied that to be the case.

Image credit: Shutterstock 

Source: Statistics Canada 

Spending on the basics, not just technology is vital for cloud security: Report

CISOs have known for years that money alone doesn’t buy security in on-premises environments. The lesson is the same in the cloud, according to a new report.

Produced by IDC and sponsored by Bell Canada, the analyst’s brief released this month is based on a survey of the cloud adoption of 300 medium and large organizations, their security capabilities, and their success at delivering strong security outcomes.

Among the surprising findings: The highest security technology spenders had more breaches than average. Technology alone wasn’t keeping organizations in the study secure. It also needs to include processes, tools, and people.

Only 52 per cent of organizations studied were able to protect themselves from a security breach, the survey concluded.

It also showed that only 34 per cent deployed cloud security posture management solutions, “leaving the remainder exposed to misconfigurations,” the study concluded.

In a lot of ways, said David Senf, a senior manager in Bell Canada’s security practice, the study shows IT departments need to focus on cybersecurity basics.

“What organizations aren’t doing enough of is focusing on knowing what they have in the cloud, what are the misconfigs, what are the actual risk levels, so they can allocate resources more effectively.”

Survey results also showed that organizations that focused on detection — including logging and monitoring IT network activity and automating response — did better than others.

The study grouped responding organizations into four categories:

Traditionalists, who are stuck in legacy skills, processes and technology, and had limited cloud adoption;

Pragmatists, who had slower than average cloud adoption but were starting to take the right security actions. Generally they fared better than others in security outcomes;

Strategists, who took a measured approach to the cloud and had the best security outcomes.

Denialists, who had rapid cloud migration but primarily relied on security technologies for data protection. They suffered the worst security outcomes of the four groups because the right security processes were not in place.

IT departments should strive to emulate the approach of Strategists, says the report.

The organizations in this group find the proper balance between speed of cloud adoption and taking time to implement security processes,” the report says.

“In addition, they focus on increasing the security skills of developers and IT and security staff. They do not rely as heavily on technology solutions as the less-secure Denialists do. They acknowledge that improving security maturity involves a continuous investment of resources and ongoing management; it is a strategy, not a project. They recognize that maintaining security takes time and if planned properly, without significant hardship.”

Strategists

–use security frameworks such as those from the Cloud Security Alliance, the U.S. National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST), the ISO and the Centre for Internet Security (CIS);

–focus on key security processes, such as having an ongoing inventory of cloud services, continuous assessment of cloud configurations, managing entitlements, and threat detection;

–both shift left (integrate security early in their application development process) and shield right (execute strong security of their live applications);

–use cloud security posture management tools and processes to detect misconfigurations and drifts from a known good state;

–automate security tasks where possible;

–and ensure cloud control through the use of cloud access security brokers and zero-trust network access.

“Things like how fast do you respond to an incident, how much protection did you put in place, how fast can you recover are important” in cloud environments, said Senf, “but if you don’t have the foundational elements of ‘what’s the inventory [of cloud services]’, ‘can I detect when something’s happening’, then, relative to your peers, you’re not going to be performing as well [as other organizations] from a security perspective.”

The post Spending on the basics, not just technology is vital for cloud security: Report first appeared on IT World Canada.

Telus offering $100/year unlimited talk plan for Boxing Week

Vancouver-based national telecom Telus has another Boxing Week offer that slipped under the radar: $100/year for talk and text.

Spotted by RedFlagDeals user ‘Giorgiodethrifty‘, this Telus plan might work for you if you’re looking for a basic, low-cost calling plan, though it does come with some major caveats. First, the plan typically gives customers 400 anytime local minutes for the year, which isn’t a lot. However, the Boxing Week offer bumps that up to unlimited nationwide minutes for one year. As far as I’m concerned, that makes this Telus plan a much better option.

Unfortunately, texting is still limited to 400 incoming and outgoing SMS and MMS messages, which also is not a lot. Still, if you’re all about calling, the texting limits may not matter much to you.

You can find the deal here.

Source: RedFlagDeals ‘Giorgiodethrifty’

GameStop reveals its 2022 Boxing Week flyer

It’s time for the holidays, and with that GameStop has shown off its Boxing Week flyer. The sale starts on December 25th and is available until December 31st, with products up to 75 percent off.

The first part of the deal mentions a free gift for the first 50 people in-store on December 26th. It doesn’t mention what the gift is, so hopefully, it’s not a GME stock.

You can grab an Xbox Series S for only $300.79 plus Biogenik Thumb Grips for your controller. Xbox controllers are available for $15 off, while PlayStation DualSense controllers are up to $25 off.

Select Nintendo titles are $25 off, which include Zelda Breath of the Wild, Zelda Skyward Sword, Mario Party Superstars, and Pokémon Snap. And starting December 18th, you can grab Mario Rabbids Sparks of Hope for $49.99

Starting December 21st, save $40 on Horizon Forbidden West and Gran Turismo 7. From December 22nd to January 5th, save $50 on NBA 2K23, and starting December 24th, you can save $30 on Gotham Knights.

Here are some more of the deals below:

Spider-Man: Miles Morales — Save $35
The Las of Us: Part 1 — Save $30
Ghost of Tsushima – Save $50
Ratchet & Clank — Save $50
Ghostwire Tokyo — Save $45
Code Vein — Save $20
Soulstice — Save $20
Steelrising — Save $15
Save up to $30 on 2K Titles like Tiny Tina’s Wonderland, WWE 2K22, The Quarry
Save up to $55 on Ubisoft Far Cry 6, Immortals Fenyx Rising, Assassin’s Creed Valhalla
Two Little Buddy Figures for $50

Source: RedFlagDeals

Breaking News: Toronto children’s hospital confirms it was hit by ransomware

The impact of the ransomware attack that hit Toronto’s Hospital for Sick Children may last for weeks.

In an online statement today the hospital said it anticipates that it will be a matter of weeks before all systems are functioning as normal. There is no evidence to date that personal information or personal health information has been impacted.

Clinical and operational teams are implementing backup procedures for systems that are not yet accessible, the statement says. “This is a fluid and evolving situation that is still under investigation,” it adds.

“While we can confirm this is a ransomware attack, SickKids has been preparing for attacks of this nature, and mobilized quickly to mitigate potential impacts to the continuity of care. We have rapidly engaged with third-party expert organizations and law enforcement to bring a resolution to the situation as quickly as possible.”

Urgent and emergent care as well as scheduled appointments and procedures are continuing, even as impacted systems are being brought back online. However, clinical teams are currently experiencing delays with retrieving lab and imaging results, which the hospital says may cause longer wait times for patients and families.

Patients and families can continue to communicate with their care teams as they normally would, the hospital says. There is no evidence to date that personal information or personal health information has been impacted.

SickKids, which dates back to 1875, is Canada’s largest hospital for treating children. It operates with a $1.21 billion annual budget, 62 per cent of which comes from the province of Ontario.

Ransomware attacks on hospitals are continuing at much the same rate as ever, noted Brett Callow, a British Columbia-based threat analyst and ransomware specialist with Emisisoft. “Realistically, we haven’t made nearly enough headway in tackling the ransomware problem. If we don’t find ways to protect our healthcare system, people may die. And that’s especially true at a time when our hospitals are already stretched to. and in some cases beyond, breaking point.”

The post Breaking News: Toronto children’s hospital confirms it was hit by ransomware first appeared on IT World Canada.

Best Buy Top Deals with offers Boxing Week pricing on some products

Best Buy Canada’s refreshed Top Deals go live on Christmas Eve at 6pm ET, with boxing week promotions applied on some of the deals.

Some of the promotions for the week include discounts on DJI drones, Canon printers and cameras, Sony headphones, Samsung wearables and more.

Samsung 65-inch 4K UHD OLED Tizen Smart TV (QN65S95BAFXZC): $2,399.99 (save $1,100)

Logitech G29 Driving Force Racing Wheel for PlayStation/PC – Dark: $299.99 (save $93)

HP Gaming PC – Mica Silver (Intel Core i5-12400F/512GB SSD/16GB RAM/RTX 3060/Windows 11): $1,199.99 (save $500)

Canon MAXIFY MB2720 Office and Business Wireless All-In-One Inkjet Printer: $149.99 (save $100)

Canon PIXMA TS3429 Wireless All-In-One Inkjet Printer: $49.99 (save $40)

Acer 23.8-inch FHD 75Hz 1ms GTG VA LED Monitor (KA242Y ABI) – Black: $119.99 (save $80)

Sony WH-1000XM5 Over-Ear Noise Cancelling Bluetooth Headphones – Silver: $399.99 (save $100)

Sony WF-1000XM4 In-Ear Noise Cancelling Truly Wireless Headphones – Black: $249.99 (save $150)

DJI Mini 2 Quadcopter Drone Fly More Combo – Grey – Bilingual: $659.99 (save $70)

DJI FPV Quadcopter Drone with Camera & Controller – Dark Grey: $1,239.99 (save $130)

Lenovo IdeaPad 3i 15.6-inch Touchscreen Laptop – Grey (Intel Core i3-1115G4/256GB SSD/8GB RAM/Windows 11 S): $449.99 (save $200)

ASUS VivoBook X515 15.6-inch Laptop – Slate Grey (Intel Core i5-1135G7/512GB SSD/8GB RAM/Windows 11): $599.99 (save $200)

SanDisk 128GB 100MB/s microSDXC Memory Card for Nintendo Switch: $24.99 (save $20)

Samsung Galaxy Watch4 40mm Smartwatch with Heart Rate Monitor – Pink Gold: $199.99 (save $80)

Therabody Theragun Elite Bluetooth Handheld Percussive Massage Device – Black: $399.99 (save $150)

Dyson V15 Detect Complete+ Cordless Stick Vacuum: $949 (save $200)

Samsung HW-Q750B/ZC 5.1.2 Channel Wireless Dolby Atmos Sound Bar w/ Wireless Subwoofer & Speakers: $649.99 (save $450)

Canon EOS Rebel T7 DSLR Camera with 18-55mm IS Lens, Bag & Memory Card: $549.99 (save $100)

Canon EOS Rebel T8i DSLR Camera with EF-S 18-55mm IS STM Lens Kit, 800 SR Bag & Wrist Strap: $1,079.99 (save $170)

WD Easystore 18TB USB 3.0 Desktop External Hard Drive (WDBAMA0180HBK-NESE) – Black: $359.99 (save $170)

Marketplace offers:

Refurbished (Excellent) – Dyson Official Outlet – V8B Cordfree Vacuum – Colour may vary (1 Year Dyson Warranty): $279.99 (save $120)

Narwal T10 4-in-1 Robot Vacuum and Mop with Self Cleaning Station, Self Washing and Drying with LiDAR Navigation, Smart Mapping, 2 Suction Mode for Hard Floor and Pet Hair, White: $799.99 (save $600)

Acer 14-inch Swift 5 Touch (Intel I7-1165G7/16Gb/512Gb SSD/Win11) – Manufacturer ReCertified w/ 1 Year Warranty: $899.99 (save $400)

It’s worth noting that the sale pricing isn’t live yet. You can find the discounted deals online on December 24th at 6pm ET/3pm PT. The deals mentioned above end on December 31st.

Check out all the deals here.

You can find all of the top Boxing Week deals at Canadian retailers here.
Image credit: Best Buy

Amazon goes live with Early Boxing Day tech deals

While Boxing Day 2022 is still a few days away, Amazon Canada has gone live with some of its deals and claimed them as Early Boxing Day deals.

Check out these offers below:

Up to 35% off Fitbit Fitness Luxe Trackers, Sense 2 Smartwatches
Up to 34% off Fitbit Inspire 2 Fitness Trackers, Versa 4 Smartwatches, Weight Scales
Up to 26% off Beats Earbuds
26% off Nikon Z 6 w/ 24-70mm Lens Kit + FTZ II Adapter
Up to 34% off GoPro HERO cameras and accessories
Up to 17% off Nikon cameras, lenses
Up to 12% off Apple MacBooks, iPads, Watches, & Accessories
Up to 43% off DJI Mini 2 Combo and FPV drone
Up to 25% off Xbox Wireless Controller
Up to 38% off Games and accessories for Nintendo Switch
Up to 56% off Games and accessories for PlayStation
Up to 56% off Games and accessories for Xbox
11% off Meta Quest with 2 free games
20% off Shure Microphones, Headphones & More.
41% off Fossil Gen 6 Smartwatches
38% off Bose headphones, earbuds & speakers
40% off Fire TV Devices
38% off Select Sony Headphones
21% off Kindle E-readers
26% off DualSense Wireless Controller
56% off PlayStation games and accessories
Up to 45% off Echo Show Devices
Up to 25% off Google Chromecast
17% off Samsung Galaxy Watches & Buds
Up to 29% off Ring Video Doorbells
Up to 28% off Nest Learning Thermostat & Nest Thermostat December
Up to 30% off Samsung TVs and Soundbars
Up to 19% off Google Pixel 7

MobileSyrup utilizes affiliate partnerships. These partnerships do not influence our editorial content, though we may earn a commission on purchases made via these links that helps fund the journalism provided free on our website.

Source: Amazon Canada

Hashtag Trending Dec 22 – Tesla hiring freeze; Mastodon user growth; Internet shutdown in Iran impacts the economy

Tesla is implementing a hiring freeze, Mastodon is gaining more popularity, and Iran’s internet shutdown is impacting its economy. 



 

That’s all the tech news that’s trending right now. Welcome to Hashtag Trending. It’s Thursday, December 22, and I am your host, Ashee Pamma.

Tesla is laying off more employees in the next quarter, according to reports from Electrek. The company is also looking to freeze hiring. This summer, Elon Musk noted that Tesla would reduce its salaried workforce by roughly 10 per cent over a three month period. At this stage it’s unclear how extensive the hiring freeze will be, especially with Tesla planning to expand in some manufacturing locations. The moves come as Tesla’s stock has been falling all year despite the company’s financials hitting new records every quarter. In a Reuters report, it revealed that Tesla analysts have also cut their price targets on the stock, worried that weakness in demand from China will weigh on the EV maker’s deliveries in 2023.

Twitter’s rival Mastodon has now grown eight times its size in a matter of weeks, going from approximately 300,000 users in October to 2.5 million in November. This growth comes as Twitter users have announced their plans to switch services amid the chaos at the platform following Elon Musk’s takeover. According to CNN, as of this week, Mastodon’s app stood at number eight among free social networking apps on the Google Play Store and at number 11 in the social networking category on Apple’s app store. Just last week, Twitter began blocking links to Mastodon on its platform. Then it made that practice an explicit policy on Sunday, before backlash forced Musk to suspend the policy in less than 24 hours. 

Internet shutdown, content filtering and platform blocking in Iran is impacting the country’s economy. In response to mass government opposition and protests, the Iranian regime launched a huge shutdown in September that limited all digital communication in the country. These disruptions have impacted businesses of all sizes. Multiple Iranian trade associations reported that their member companies are dealing with major losses. According to a report from Wired, some businesses have found that the recent outage affected hundreds of thousands of small businesses. The cumulative impact of these crackdowns has impacted the rights of over 80 million people currently in Iran and disrupted aspects of society in the country.

On January 1, 2023, copyrighted works from 1927 will enter the U.S. public domain. They will be free for all to copy, share, and build upon. Some of these works include Virginia Woolf’s To The Lighthouse and the final Sherlock Holmes stories by Arthur Conan Doyle. When works go into the public domain, they can now legally be shared, without permission or fee. This means that  online repositories such as the Internet Archive, Google Books, and the New York Public Library, for example, can make works fully available online. In addition, community theaters can screen the films and youth orchestras can perform the music publicly, without paying licensing fees. The Centre for the Study of Public Domain has compiled a list of all works entering the domain online. 

That’s all the tech news that’s trending right now. Hashtag Trending is a part of the ITWC Podcast network. Add us to your Alexa Flash briefings or your Google Home daily briefing. Make sure to sign up for our Daily IT Wire newsletter to get all the news that matters directly in your inbox every day. Also, catch the next episode of Hashtag Tendances, our weekly Hashtag Trending episode in French, which drops every Thursday morning. If you have a suggestion or a tip, drop us a line in the comments or via email. Thank you for listening, I’m Ashee Pamma.

 

The post Hashtag Trending Dec 22 – Tesla hiring freeze; Mastodon user growth; Internet shutdown in Iran impacts the economy first appeared on IT World Canada.

Google Meet now features live French to English translations

Google added live translation support for Google Meet back in September 2021. Since then, the feature has helped users overcome language barriers in meetings, with English speech being seamlessly translated to French, German, Portuguese and Spanish.

Up until now, the feature was limited to translating and live captioning English speech to various languages. Now, Google has added support for additional languages, alongside support for translating speech from other languages to English live captions.

English speech can now be translated and live captioned to three new languages, namely Japanese, Mandarin (simplified), and Swedish, whereas speech in French, German, Portuguese, and Spanish can be translated and live captioned into English.

Its worth noting that support for the newly added languages is still in Beta, so there might be a few hiccups here and there, but the feature should work as intended for the most part.

The functionality is currently rolling out for Google Workspace Business Standard, Business Plus, Enterprise Starter, Enterprise Standard, Enterprise Plus, Education Plus, and the Teaching and Learning Upgrade, and should be available to users over the next few days. Read more about the update here.

Source: Google

Study: the most dangerous searches for software online

In a recent study, Surfshark analyzed search results obtained by Googling for downloads of popular software, and their findings are enough to make you shudder: up to 64 per cent of links in search results for some programs were to sites spreading malware.

The search for “Avid software” appears to be the most dangerous, with search results containing 64.4 per cent of potentially dangerous links.

The methodology used by Surfshark was simple. The company first compiled a list of the most popular software, divided into five categories: social media, web browsers, crypto wallets, small business and creativity. It used softwareadvice.com‘s extensive database to determine the most popular applications.

Then it ran Google searches using the names of the software paired with the terms “download” and “torrent.” It finally analyzed the first five pages of results using a malware scanner. All results identified as medium or higher risk were considered potentially dangerous.

Across all categories, one-third of search results are risky, and six searches returned more than 50 per cent potentially dangerous links. These are searches for “Avid software” (64.4 per cent), “Substance 3D Printer” (57.32 per cent), “Sketch software” (56.38 per cent), “Substance 3D Stager” (56.25 per cent), “Maxon Cinema 4D” (55 .1 per cent) and “V-Ray” (53.76 per cent)

It is the “creativity” category which shows the worst results, Avid software being one of these.

In the social media category, Twitter leads, with 48.3 per cent of search results pointing to potential malware.

The small business software category is dominated by the workforce management tool Hubstaff, with 44.3 per cent of potentially dangerous search results.

Lumi Wallet, with 47.1 per cent of questionable results, sits at the top of the crypto-wallets category, while the top of the web browser category is occupied by the Vivaldi browser, with 39.53 per cent of results when you search for a download that are dangerous.

Of some concern, most major web browsers – including Microsoft Edge (32.58 per cent), Safari (30.23 per cent), Opera (30.12 per cent), Chrome (29.87 per cent), Brave (23.60 per cent) – are among the 10 browsers whose downloads are the riskiest to search for.

To protect yourself, Surfshark offers 5 pieces of sound advice:

Always stick to reliable sources for downloads
Choose secure sites (https:// instead of http://)
Make sure your browser is up-to-date
Choose a trusted ad blocker to help stop malware
Install a good anti-virus program and keep it up-to-date

The full study results are available on the Surfshark website.

The post Study: the most dangerous searches for software online first appeared on IT World Canada.