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The 5G rollout and the concern over C-band has caused some airlines to cancel flights

Even though major carriers AT&T and Verizon scaled back their 5G rollout scheduled for yesterday, some flights were cancelled or rerouted anyways due to the concerns that 5G could cause airline equipment to malfunction.

AT&T and Verizon turned on sections of their C-band 5G networks across the US on Wednesday but have agreed to hold off on enabling it directly near airports for now.

CMMC Series: Tier One Overview

Last week we covered a general overview of what the Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification (CMMC) program is and what’s been announced for 2022 so far. Presently, there are five maturity tiers found in program, although if (or when) version 2.0 is released it’s been announced that the program will be simplified down to just three tiers.

Norton’s Antivirus Software Comes with a Crypto Miner, and They’re Not Alone

Last week a claim unfolded on Twitter that Norton was installing crypto mining software without authorization on PC’s which then rose to the level of outrage amongst some Norton antivirus software customers.

The truth on the subject is a mixed bag, while it’s true they are installing a crypto miner on customer machines it’s not active on every machine, customers must authorize the process before the device will begin mining crypto (in this case Ethereum). If you authorize Norton to begin mining cryptocurrency on your device they will setup a wallet for you and after a small cut, and then deposit your earnings there when you meet a certain threshold.

CMMC Series: What’s Happening in 2022

We’ve touched on the Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification (CMMC) before in this blog, but over the next five weeks we’ll be doing a deep dive into this particular cybersecurity framework in our new CMMC Series. Starting with today’s post on what’s happening currently and what we can expect in 2022.

At Valley Techlogic, we believe a good cybersecurity framework can be the backbone for businesses looking to beef up their cybersecurity implementation.

New Year, New Bugs – The Y2K22 Bug Crippling Exchange Servers

We hope everyone had a wonderful New Year but unfortunately for those with 2016/2019 Exchange servers, the turning of the clocks to 01/01/2022 led to an unpleasant bug.

Computer bugs related to a New Years event aren’t uncommon, we created this infographic about other times this has happened (as well as a notable future one).

The error this time was caused by the date checking within the anti-malware portion of Exchange.