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Shut Down covers cybersecurity measures that stop systems, services, or access to contain threats, limit damage, and support safe recovery.

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Shutting down is the orderly termination and powering off of a computer, server, or network device; the term can also describe taking a service or system offline. A normal operating-system shutdown closes applications, writes pending data, and stops services, while a forced power-off may leave files or storage in an inconsistent state. Powering down is not the same as securely erasing data or removing an attacker’s persistence.

During incident response, shutting down can halt active malicious processes, but it also destroys volatile evidence such as memory-resident code and may prevent investigators from examining the running system. Teams should generally document the decision and apply appropriate network containment or evidence-collection procedures first, unless immediate isolation is necessary. For routine shutdowns, access controls should restrict who can power systems off, and full-disk encryption remains important because a powered-off device or removed drive may still expose stored data if stolen.

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Researcher claims extension didn't start out by exfiltrating info... while dev says its actions are 'compliant' Security boffins at Koi Security have warned of a shift in behavior of a popular Chrome VPN extension, FreeVPN.One, which recently appears to have begun snaffling screenshots of users' page activity and transmitting them to a remote server without their knowledge – and Google has yet to take it down.…

Bank Info Security 10 months, 3 weeks ago

Anthropic Tests Safeguard for AI 'Model Welfare'

Claude Models May Shut Down Harmful Chats in Some Edge CasesAnthropic introduced a safeguard to its Claude artificial intelligence platform that allows certain models to end conversations in cases of persistently harmful or abusive interactions. The company said it's doing so not to protect human users, but as a way to mitigate risks to the models.