More than 500 million devices currently running Windows 10 are approaching a critical turning point, as many of them are not eligible for an upgrade to Windows 11 due to hardware limitations. This has raised growing concerns about long-term security risks once support deadlines pass. In response, Google is actively promoting an alternative, positioning its ChromeOS Flex platform as a free way to modernize aging systems.
Google states that older laptops and desktops can be converted into faster, more secure, and easier-to-manage devices by installing ChromeOS Flex. The system is cloud-based and designed to extend the usability of existing hardware without requiring users to purchase new machines. Although ChromeOS Flex has been available for some time, Google has now made adoption simpler by introducing a physical USB installation kit. Developed in partnership with Back Market, the kit allows users to install the operating system more easily. It is priced at approximately $3 or €3, is reusable, and is supported by recycling-focused efforts such as Closing the Loop to reduce electronic waste.
The timing of this push is closely linked to Microsoft’s decision to end mainstream support for Windows 10 in October 2025. That shift has forced users into a difficult position: invest in new hardware or continue using an operating system that will no longer receive full security updates. While Microsoft does offer an Extended Security Updates (ESU) program, it is only a temporary solution. For individual users, coverage extends for roughly one additional year, while enterprise customers may receive longer support under specific licensing agreements.
The transition to Windows 11 has also been slower than expected. Adoption challenges, largely driven by strict hardware requirements, have resulted in an unusually large number of users remaining on Windows 10 even after its official lifecycle milestone. This contrasts with Microsoft’s earlier expectations of a smoother migration similar to the shift from Windows 7 to Windows 10, which had seen broader and faster adoption.
Google is also emphasizing environmental considerations as part of its messaging. The company highlights that manufacturing a new laptop contributes significantly to its overall carbon footprint. By extending the lifespan of existing devices, ChromeOS Flex helps reduce landfill waste and avoids emissions associated with producing new hardware. Google further claims that ChromeOS-based systems consume around 19% less energy on average compared to similar platforms.
Despite this, switching away from Windows remains a debated decision. Many users rely on the Windows ecosystem for software compatibility, workflows, and familiarity. However, for devices that cannot support Windows 11, alternatives such as ChromeOS Flex present a practical workaround. Even in cases where users purchase new computers, older machines can still be repurposed using such operating systems, for example within households.
At the same time, Microsoft is continuing to strengthen its Windows 11 ecosystem. Devices already running Windows 11 are being automatically updated to newer versions to maintain consistent security coverage. The company is using artificial intelligence to determine when systems are ready for upgrades and applying updates accordingly. While a similar approach could theoretically be applied to Windows 10 devices that meet upgrade requirements, this has not yet been implemented. It remains uncertain whether this could change as future deadlines approach.
Recent developments have also drawn attention to user hesitation around Windows 11. Reports indicated that a recent update disrupted a key Start menu function, even as official communication suggested there were no outstanding issues. Subsequent updates and documentation now indicate that previously known bugs have been resolved, with Microsoft steadily addressing issues since the platform’s release in late 2024.
Additional reporting suggests that all known issues in the current Windows 11 version have been marked as resolved in official tracking systems. This reflects ongoing improvements, though it also underlines the complexity of maintaining stability across large-scale operating system deployments.
For enterprise users, Microsoft is extending support in more flexible ways. Certain legacy versions of Windows 10, including enterprise and IoT editions released in 2016, are eligible for additional security updates. These updates are delivered through ESU programs available via volume licensing or cloud solution providers. However, Microsoft continues to describe this as a temporary measure rather than a permanent extension.
For individual users, the situation is more restrictive. Extended Security Updates are limited in duration, and once they expire, devices will no longer receive security patches, bug fixes, or technical support. However, the continued availability of such programs suggests that support timelines may evolve depending on broader user adoption patterns.
The wider ecosystem is also seeing alternative recommendations. Some industry discussions encourage migration to Linux-based systems, while Google’s ChromeOS Flex represents a more consumer-friendly option. With hundreds of millions of devices affected, the coming months will play a crucial role in determining whether users remain within the Windows ecosystem or begin shifting toward alternative platforms.
For a long time, ransomware incidents have followed a predictable pattern. An organization’s systems are locked, critical files become inaccessible, operations slow down or stop entirely, and leadership must decide whether to recover data from backups or pay a ransom.
That pattern still exists today, but recent findings show that the threat has evolved into multiple forms.
A recent industry report based on hundreds of real-world incident response cases reveals that attackers are increasingly moving toward a different strategy. Instead of encrypting data, many are now stealing it and using it for extortion. These “data-only” attacks have increased sharply, rising from just 2 percent of cases to 22 percent within a year, representing an elevenfold jump.
This trend is also reflected in broader industry data. The Verizon 2025 Data Breach Investigations Report treats both encrypted and non-encrypted ransomware incidents as part of a single extortion category. According to its findings, ransomware was involved in 44 percent of the breaches it studied.
Why resilience needs to be redefined
These developments highlight a critical issue. Many organizations still treat ransomware mainly as a problem of restoring operations. Their focus is often on how quickly systems can be brought back online, whether backups are secure, and how much downtime can be managed.
While these factors remain relevant, they are no longer enough to address the full scope of risk.
When attackers shift their focus from disabling systems to stealing sensitive information, the situation changes completely. The priority is no longer just restoring access to systems. Instead, organizations must immediately understand what data has been taken, who owns it, and how sensitive it is.
This includes identifying whether the exposed information involves customer records, regulated datasets, intellectual property, or internal communications. It also requires knowing where that data was stored, whether in primary systems, cloud services, third-party platforms, or legacy storage that may have been retained unnecessarily.
If leadership teams cannot quickly answer these questions, restoring systems will not prevent further damage, including regulatory consequences, reputational harm, or legal exposure.
Data theft is becoming the main objective
Additional reporting reinforces this shift. Data from Coveware shows that in the second quarter of 2025, data exfiltration occurred in 74 percent of ransomware incidents. The company noted that in many cases, stealing data has become the central objective rather than just a step before encryption.
Attackers are no longer focused only on disruption. Instead, they are aiming to maximize pressure by using stolen data as leverage.
Encryption still exists, but its role is changing
This does not mean that encryption-based attacks have disappeared. Many ransomware operations still use a “double extortion” approach, where they both lock systems and steal data.
However, the key change is that data theft alone can now be enough to force payment. This reduces the effectiveness of relying solely on backups as a defense strategy.
Organizations such as the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency continue to stress the importance of maintaining secure and offline backups that are regularly tested. At the same time, they warn that cloud-based backups can fail if compromised data is synchronized back into the system and overwrites clean versions.
This underlines a broader reality: restoring systems is only one part of true resilience.
Moving beyond a recovery-focused mindset
The cybersecurity industry is gradually adjusting to these changes. There is a growing emphasis on protecting and understanding data, rather than focusing only on system recovery.
This reflects a more dynamic turn of events. Resilience is no longer just about recovering from an attack. It is about reducing uncertainty about data exposure before an incident occurs.
However, many organizations still measure their preparedness using disaster recovery metrics such as recovery time objectives and backup testing. Even service providers often frame ransomware readiness in these terms.
In a data-driven threat environment, a more meaningful measure of security maturity is whether an organization truly understands its data. This includes knowing where sensitive information is stored, how it moves across systems, who has access to it, and whether it needs to be retained.
Guidance from the National Institute of Standards and Technology supports this approach. Its Cybersecurity Framework 2.0 recommends maintaining detailed inventories of data, including its type, ownership, origin, and location. It also emphasizes lifecycle management, such as securely deleting unnecessary data and reducing redundant systems that increase exposure.
NIST’s incident response guidance further highlights that organizations with clear data inventories are better equipped to determine what information may have been affected during a breach.
The hidden risk of data sprawl
A major challenge for many organizations is uncontrolled data growth. Sensitive information is often copied across multiple platforms, including cloud storage, collaboration tools, shared drives, employee devices, and third-party services.
At the same time, outdated data is rarely deleted, often because responsibility for doing so is unclear. Access permissions also tend to expand over time without proper review.
As a result, organizations may appear prepared due to strong backup systems, while actually carrying significant hidden risk due to poorly managed data.
The bigger strategic lesson
The key takeaway is not that backups are unimportant. They remain a critical part of cybersecurity. However, they solve a different problem.
Backups help restore systems after disruption. They do not protect against the consequences of stolen data, such as loss of confidentiality, reputational damage, or reduced negotiating power during an extortion attempt.
To address modern threats, resilience must become more focused on data. This includes better classification of sensitive information, stronger access controls, improved visibility across cloud and third-party systems, and stricter data retention practices to reduce unnecessary exposure.
Organizations also need to communicate more clearly with leadership and stakeholders about the difference between operational recovery and true resilience.
Ultimately, the organizations best prepared for modern ransomware are not just those that can recover quickly, but those that already understand their data well enough to respond immediately.
In today’s environment, the gap between having backups and truly understanding data is where attackers gain their advantage.
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Email accounts are among the most frequently exposed pieces of personal data in security breaches, which is a major reason why people often find their information circulating online. While using stronger passwords and enabling multi-factor authentication can significantly improve online safety, these measures do not address every risk. In many situations, individuals unintentionally make it easier for attackers to access their information simply by sharing their email address.
Whenever you register for promotional emails, shop online, or sign up for free trials, you are usually required to provide an email address. Using your primary email in these cases increases the likelihood that data brokers will collect and resell your information. In an environment where cybercriminals actively look for such data, even basic details can be exploited. Attackers may use this information for account takeovers, phishing campaigns, financial fraud, or even website misuse. If the same password is reused across platforms, a leaked email-password combination can also provide access to social media accounts and digital banking services.
To reduce this exposure without completely changing how you use email, one effective approach is to adopt a burner email, sometimes called a disposable or temporary email, or an email alias. This is a secondary address created specifically for limited or one-time use. It can be useful for situations where you want to remain anonymous, manage signups separately, or prevent your main inbox from becoming overloaded.
Unwanted emails are a persistent issue for most users. Messages from social media platforms, online stores, and newsletter subscriptions can quickly accumulate, resulting in hundreds of unread emails. This clutter can consume storage space and make it harder to notice important messages. Although users often try to manage this by marking emails as spam or clearing their inbox, these efforts are not always effective. Even after unsubscribing, promotional emails often continue to arrive, forcing users to repeat the same cleanup process frequently.
Because managing a primary email account for personal or professional use can become overwhelming, using a separate email for non-essential activities is one of the most efficient ways to reduce spam. A temporary address dedicated to registrations, shopping platforms, or newsletters helps keep the main inbox organized. In many cases, setting up such an address is straightforward. For example, users of Gmail can create variations of their existing email by adding a “+” symbol followed by a keyword. An address like “username+promotions@gmail.com” will still deliver messages to the main inbox.
Since Gmail does not allow these alias variations to be deleted, users can instead create filters to automatically sort incoming messages. These filters can archive, delete, or label emails associated with specific aliases for later review. Other email providers may offer different methods for creating aliases, and some may not support this feature at all, so users should verify what options are available to them.
A primary email account serves multiple purposes beyond communication. It can store important files, act as a central identity across services, and help manage tasks. Because of this, protecting it from data brokers is critical. Receiving alerts that your email address has appeared on the dark web can be alarming. While such exposure does not necessarily mean your accounts have been directly compromised, it does increase the likelihood of attacks such as credential stuffing, identity theft, and phishing.
Since your main email often acts as the entry point to your digital life, limiting where you share it is essential. When asked to provide an email for purchases, downloads, or anonymous participation, it is safer to avoid using your personal or professional address. Although aliases can help organize incoming messages, they do not fully hide your actual email identity.
For stronger privacy, a true burner email is more effective. This type of account is usually anonymous and not connected to your personal identity. It allows you to send and receive messages without revealing who you are. This can also reduce the effectiveness of phishing attacks, as attackers have less information to craft targeted scams or trick users into sharing sensitive data such as financial details or identification numbers.
Most personal or work email addresses include identifiable elements such as your name or initials, making it easier for others to recognize you. This reduces anonymity. In situations where privacy is important, such as accessing discounts or completing one-time verifications, a fully separate burner account is more suitable.
Unlike simple email forwarding systems or aliases, many burner email services generate completely unique addresses using random combinations of letters, numbers, and symbols. This allows users to interact with unfamiliar platforms or individuals without exposing personal details. Some of these services also automatically delete accounts after a short period or limited usage. Once removed, they typically leave little to no recoverable data in storage systems or broker databases.
Despite their advantages, burner emails are not appropriate for every use case. Knowing when to rely on them is as important as knowing when to use a permanent email. Many disposable email services are designed for speed and convenience, which means they may not include features such as password protection, encryption, or multi-factor authentication. Their primary form of security is simply that they are temporary.
Before using such services, it is important to review their terms and privacy policies. Even if you believe no sensitive information is being shared, these platforms may still collect metadata such as your IP address, which can be used to gather additional insights about your activity.
Hackers targeted Axios, a famous open-source JavaScript library that developers use to oversee HTTP requests. The North Korean gang accessed organizations' systems via malware that opens backdoor access to OS. Hackers targeted two versions of Axios that were downloaded over 183 million times each week; organizations that downloaded it during the particular time period were exposed to the attack.
Hackers with ties to Pyongyang gained access to the account of a software engineer who oversees the open-source program Axios on Tuesday for at least three hours. According to the report, the attackers used that access to send infected updates to any company that had downloaded the software at the time. This caused the software developer to rush to take back control of his account while cybersecurity executives nationwide attempted to determine the extent of the damage.
While the full damage may take months to fix, experts believe that hundreds of thousands of business secrets have already leaked, which can make it one of the worst data breaches.
The North Korean group, suspicious of hacking Axios is called UNC1069. Since 2018, the gang has attacked the finance industry. Mandiant believes that the hackers will "try to leverage the credentials and system access they recently obtained in this software supply chain attack to target and steal cryptocurrency from enterprises,"
Hacking has become a staple of North Korea. The revenue generated from these cyberattacks funds the country’s nuclear and missile programs to the point that these plans are half funded through hacking. In recent years, state-sponsored hackers have stolen billions of dollars from banks and cryptocurrency firms. This includes the infamous (and record-breaking) $1.5 billion crypto theft in 2025 in a single attack.
The recent attack was the most advanced supply chain effort to date, cleaning its tracks after installing the payload on the target device. It made detection difficult for developers who unknowingly downloaded the malicious software. Experts say that UNC1069 is not even trying to hide anymore, they just disappears before detection.