Apple iOS 13.3 Is Poised To Launch With This Killer Security Feature

Apple’s iOS 13.3 should be coming to your iPhone pretty soon, and with it a bunch of cool new features. One of the interesting and exciting iOS 13.3 updates for anyone who is concerned about their security is the ability to use security keys with Apple’s Safari browser. 

The move is revealed in Apple’s release notes for the second developer beta, which says iOS 13.3 supports NFC, USB, and Lightning FIDO2-compliant security keys in Safari. 

In other words, when the iOS 13.3 update drops, you will able to use physical security keys such as Yubico’s iPhone compatible YubiKey 5Ci–which was previously unavailable to browsers such as Apple’s Safari and Google’s Chrome. However, it could be used with some password manager apps such as 1Password. 

It is expected that iOS 13.3 will probably hit sometime in December. So what’s the deal with security keys?

Security keys in iOS 13.3: A great idea 

A security key is a convenient and secure form of authentication because you can simply plug it into your device. 

Security researcher Sean Wright goes one step further, saying security keys are “fantastic.” 

“Keys are a rare case in security where a good mechanism comes with something that is relatively easy to use. They represent a desire to move away from password based authentication to something that is often more secure as well as hopefully more user friendly.”

He points out that security keys also prevent phishing attempts, where an attacker will try to steal your details by, for example, sending you an email prompting you to enter your credentials onto a fake page. 

ZeroDayLab’s director of cyber security strategy, Stuart Peck agrees the move is a “great idea.” However, he points out that support for YubiKey is limited–although this is likely to change over time. 

But like any form of authentication, security keys aren’t bulletproof. You might even want to avoid carrying them around with you, especially if there is a chance they may get lost. “Like any key, you will want to ensure that you keep them safe, and avoid leaving them around and losing them,” Wright says.

In order to protect yourself while still getting the most benefit out of the key, Wright advises having another means–perhaps another backup key–to access your account. “So if you lost your key or it was stolen you would immediately revoke it.”

Security keys in iOS 13.3: Should you use one?

It’s an exciting change, and security keys are a definite yes for a technical user who is concerned about their data. However, Peck thinks they could be overkill for the average person. “Unless your personal threat model requires the use of security keys, an app for two factor authentication is just as acceptable.”

Apple’s iOS 13 is certainly moving in the right direction for security and privacy. The iPhone maker has added a host of new security features to the updated operating system including the ability to lock down its voice assistant Siri. 

It has also introduced new features that could be a blow to firms such as Facebook and Google by highlighting how much data they collect in the background and giving you the opportunity to prevent this.

Personally, I’m looking forward to iOS 13.3 and the ability to try out a security key on my device. But it isn’t for everyone–and it’s certainly not something you’d want to lose–so if you do use one make sure you have a back up. 

Here are the features being removed or deprecated in Windows 10 version 1909

Yesterday, Microsoft released the Windows 10 November 2019 Update. It’s a small update, with a small list of new features. It’s no surprise, since Windows 10 version 1909 is really just an enablement package that lights up some new features and bumps up the build number. Version 1903 and 1909 are even serviced with the exact same cumulative updates.

Microsoft has updated its support documents to show which features are being removed or deprecated in the new update. Being that this is a small update, it should come as no surprise that this list is small as well.

And then there are the features that are being deprecated. This means that these features are still included in the OS, but they’re not longer being actively developed. It also means that they may be removed in a future release.

My People is probably the most consumer-facing feature that’s being deprecated. Presumably, it wasn’t being used much.

The next feature update is Windows 10 20H1, which is due out in the first half of 2020. The good news is that it’s pretty much done, so if a deprecated feature on the list isn’t removed just yet, it probably won’t be.

Microsoft begins the official rollout of Windows 10 1909

Microsoft is kicking off the official rollout of Windows 10 1909, the Windows 10 November 2019 feature update today, November 12. The timing isn’t surprising, given today is Patch Tuesday, which tends to be when Microsoft commences new feature update rollouts these days.

As it did with Windows 10 1903, the May 2019 Update, Microsoft first rolled out its 1909 feature update to developers about a month ahead of today’s commercial launch. In mid-October, Microsoft made the 1909 client and server ISOs available to developers on MSDN.

Today, Microsoft is starting to make 1909 (Build 18363.418) available to “seekers,” meaning those who proactively go to Windows Update, check for updates and subsequently opt to download it immediately. As it has been doing with recent updates, Microsoft will be throttling delivery, providing the new feature update over the next few weeks to users with devices that Microsoft has deemed most likely to accommodate the 1909 feature update successfully. 

Officials said 1909 is available via Windows Server Update Services and Windows Update for Business. It also will be available vi the Volume License Servicing Center (VLSC) in the next day or so. Users can download from here the Windows 10 1909 Enterprise evaluation edition (Thanks to Tero Alhonen for that link. Officials added that Windows Server 1909 is scheduled for general availability later this month via the Azure Portal and the Volume Licensing Servicing Center.

Microsoft has been testing 1909 in the Slow Ring since July 1. This feature update is unlike previous Windows 10 feature updates, in that Microsoft intentionally decided to limit the number of new features in the release and focus on making changes to the way it services, or updates, this particular release. Though 1909 will look and feel more like a traditional service pack or cumulative update to many users than it will a full feature update, technically it still is a feature update.

As Microsoft officials noted earlier this year, customers who already are running Windows 1903 will find 1909 to be a small, minimally obtrusive update. Those on older Windows 10 feature updates (like 1803 or 1809, for example) will find 1909 to act more like a traditional feature update in terms of size and amount of time required to install it.

Many of the new features in the Windows 10 November 2019 Update are behind-the-scenes improvements to general performance and battery usage efficiency. There are also several feature improvements included for OEMs, application developers, and enterprise administrators. With the release of Windows 10 Version 1909, users of voice-activated digital assistants will be able to converse with associated devices from the Windows 10 lock screen. This handful of new features will be turned on by default. Windows 10 1909 users will start seeing the new Chromium-based Edge browser starting some time after January 15, 2020, and it will be delivered on a staggered, gradual basis to those customers.

Microsoft already is well down the path of testing the next Windows 10 feature update, known as 20H1/2003. Just yesterday, November 11, Microsoft made build number 19013.1122 of 20H1 available for the first time to testers in the Slow Ring. 

Windows 10 20H1 — codenamed “Vibranium” — introduces Cortana as a standalone app, improvements to Windows Subsystem for Linux 2 including Arm64 support, the ability to sign into a device with a Windows Hello PIN, and faster Bluetooth pairing with keyboards and Microsoft mouse devices. 

The next update after 20H1 will be — unsurprisingly, 20H2 — which internally is believed to be codenamed “Manganese.” Now that the Windows and Azure engineering are on the same “semester” development schedule, Microsoft is believed to be targeting summer 2020 as its completion date for 20H2, which means it could begin testing among Fast Ring Insiders any time now. 

Microsoft officials have declined to say whether all the H2 releases of Windows 10 feature updates, going forward, will be like 19H2, meaning very minor and basically similar to a cumulative update for the H1 release. I’ve been hearing from my contacts that 19H2 might just be a one-off that was kind of a catch-up/servicing type of thing that won’t become the new normal. If that’s true, 20H2 could be a more substantial, regular feature update when it arrives.

A related aside: Today, November 12, is the last day that Windows 10 1803 Home, Pro and Pro for Workstation users will get free security and feature updates from Microsoft, as today is the end of support for those 1803 feature updates. Windows 10 1803 Enterprise and Education users still have another year of support left.

macOS 11 Ventura is the operating system Apple should be making

The latest version of macOS — 10.15 Catalina — was released just a month ago, and introduced some big changes, including the break-up of iTunes, and dropping support for 32-bit apps, which unfortunately meant some popular third-party software stopped working.

It might not happen any time soon, but if Apple does eventually make the jump to macOS 11, it’s fair to say the operating system will get a fairly major overhaul at that point. If you’d like to see how it should look, we’ve got this stunning video to wow you.

This concept comes from YouTuber Kamer Kaan Avdan, who has previously created similar videos for updated versions of Windows 95, Windows XP, Windows 7, and Windows 11. This isn’t the first time Avdan has turned his design skills to Apple though. He’s also created concept videos for iOS 12 and iOS 13, and re-imagined iOS 6 for modern devices. A year ago gave us his macOS Cupertino concept.

His take on macOS 11 Ventura gives us a redesigned Finder, easier drag and drop, the ability to pin widgets to the desktop, a new Settings app, a redesigned Mission Control, enhanced Spotlight, a darker Dark Mode, and an overall more consistent design — something we see a lot of in Avdan’s other concepts.

He also includes Face ID — because of course he does — and a proactive Siri.

Watch the video below and tell us what you think of his macOS 11 Ventura concept. Do you prefer it to macOS Catalina?

Chrome web apps will soon tout desktop-like speed

If web apps are going to truly replace native apps, they’ll need the near-instantaneous responsiveness of desktop apps. That appears to be on the horizon, thankfully. Google is unveiling Chrome tools that will help web apps run as quickly as their native counterparts, not to mention make them more usable offline. A newly introduce Web Bundles framework will let developers distribute fast-loading web apps through “any format,” including USB drives — you wouldn’t even need to be online to start using an app. Background syncing and context indexing, meanwhile, will let apps “proactively” cache data to make sure it’s quickly available whether or not you’re connected.

Web Bundles are available now through an experimental flag in Chrome, while background syncing and content indexing are only available as “origin trials.”

Other updates are more about offering native-like features. An SMS Receiver allows text-base two-factor authentication for secure sign-ins, while a contact picker and a native file system framework respectively help you share and save data more like you’d expect.

It’s up to developers to make use of these technologies, so don’t expect the web to change overnight. That’s particularly true when many website creators may want software-agnostic web apps that work equally well on Firefox, Opera, Safari and other common browsers. If enough web app writers do embrace this, though, Chromebooks may be more viable for people used to the performance and convenience of apps on other platforms.

WhatsApp’s latest feature, Catalogs, caters to small businesses skipping the web for mobile

WhatsApp is expanding the capabilities of its dedicated app for business owners who want to reach their customers on smartphones. The Facebook-owned company is today introducing to the WhatsApp Business app a new “catalogs” feature that will allow the businesses to showcase and share their products and services to potential customers, who can browse photos, view prices and read product descriptions to help inform their purchase decisions.

These catalogs effectively serve as a mobile storefront on WhatsApp — and one that can be operated without the need for a web page at all. Instead, the business owner simply visits the new Catalog option in their app’s settings and uploads photos of whatever it is they’re selling and fill out the details, which can optionally include a product or service code (e.g. a SKU), if need be.

These catalog items can then be sent to customers in a WhatsApp chat message. For example, if a customer asks about a particular item or for a recommendation, the business owner can tap to send a particular item from their catalog that includes all the information the customer wants to know.

The catalogs are particularly appealing to WhatsApp’s customer based in emerging markets, where much of users’ online activity is taking place inside apps instead of on the wider web. As new users come online in these regions, they’re often skipping the PC revolution entirely and going straight to smartphones instead.

Already, the WhatsApp Business app is claiming a portion of that market. Earlier this year, the company said the app had reached some 5 million business customers.

The catalogs feature today joins several others designed with the needs of businesses in mind, including business profiles, quick replies for messages, chat labels and automated messages.

WhatsApp says the new feature is available to businesses using the WhatsApp Business app on both Android and iPhone in Brazil, Germany, India, Indonesia, Mexico, the U.K. and the U.S., for the time being. It will roll out to other worldwide markets “soon,” but WhatsApp didn’t offer a more exact launch time frame.

Apple fixes background app bug with iOS and iPadOS 13.2.2

Today, Apple released a minor update for the operating systems running on iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch devices. Labeled iOS 13.2.2 (or iPadOS 13.2.2 for the iPad), the key bullet point in this update is a fix for a widely reported (and apparently RAM-management-related) bug in iOS 13 that saw apps quitting and losing their state while running in the background.

All the other changes listed for this update are bug fixes as well. Issues addressed include multiple problems with cellular service and reception, corrupted emails when using S/MIME encryption, a charging problem when using YubiKey accessories, and a bug involving Kerberos authentication in Safari.

Here are Apple’s release notes for iOS 13.2.2. The iPadOS release notes are the same, except they omit the bullet point about fixing a cellular data bug:

iOS 13.2.2 includes bug fixes and improvements for your iPhone. This update:

Fixes an issue that could cause apps to quit unexpectedly when running in the background

Resolves an issue where iPhone may temporarily lose cellular service after a call

Addresses an issue where cellular data may temporarily not be available

Fixes an issue that caused replies to S/MIME encrypted email messages between Exchange accounts to be unreadable

Addresses an issue where using Kerberos single sign-on service in Safari may present an authentication prompt

Resolves an issue where charging may be interrupted on YubiKey Lightning-powered accessories

This marks the seventh iOS software update since the release of iOS 13 less than 50 days ago. As we’ve noted before, this is an unprecedented release cadence from Apple, which clearly marks some internal changes and reflects an effort to get ahead of bugs that shipped with an ambitious—and it appears from the outside, rushed—iOS 13 and iPadOS release.

iOS and iPadOS 13.2.2 are available today for all devices that are supported by iOS 13. You can find the option to update in the Settings app on your device.

You Can Now Clean Install Windows 10 20H1 as Microsoft Releases ISO Files for Build 19013

New Windows 10 20H1 ISO files have been released. These latest ISO files are available for Build 19013 that was released to Insiders in the Fast ring last week. This particular build brought new kaomoji, newer version of PowerToys and some WSL 2 improvements.

Microsoft last released ISO files about a month ago for build 18990. But you can now clean install a latest build of the next major Windows 10 version. As reported earlier, Microsoft has internally almost finalized Windows 10 20H1 potentially planning to deliver the RTM build to Insiders at the end of this year to align the release with Azure. This is probably why we aren’t seeing any new features being tested with Windows 10 20H1 anymore.

You can now download official Windows 10 ISO files for build 19013 from the Windows Insider website

To be able to download the ISO files, you will first need to follow these steps to get yourself enrolled in the Windows Insider Program. [Windows Insiders can directly download the Windows 10 20H1 ISO files]

Sign up for the Windows Insider Program .

Make sure your machine meets the system requirements.

Download the ISO files.

WhatsApp gives you more ways to avoid annoying group chats

WhatsApp is giving you more ways to block people from adding you to group chats. Its updated privacy settings replace the original “nobody” option with a “my contacts except” choice that lets you prevent certain people (or all of them, if you prefer) from dragging you into a group. Your close friends and family can add you to a chat, for example, but a co-worker can’t rope you into a sports discussion without your permission.

Like earlier, a chat administrator who doesn’t have permission can still send a private invitation through an individual chat. The request will disappear after three days, so you can ignore it if you’d rather not respond.

The feature should be active now on Android and iOS. This is an acknowledgment that unwanted group invitations are still an issue, of course, but it’s also part of an ongoing effort to fight fake news. There should be fewer opportunities for people to spread misinformation, at least to people who weren’t already receptive to it.

CHROME OS 78 FINALLY ADDED VIRTUAL DESKS, BUT YOU’LL NEED TO DO THIS TO FULLY LEVERAGE THEM

The trail that has led to Virtual Desks finally rolling out in Chrome OS 78 has been a long one. Don’t get me wrong, I’m glad the team took the time to get this new feature fully-formed before actually introducing it to the world. Though we’ve been talking about Virtual Desks for nearly the entirety of 2019, Chrome OS 78 is the first Stable Channel update to include this feature right out of the box without any additional steps necessary.

Here’s the thing, though: the entire experience is STILL not complete. Yes, from the overview mode you can now add up to 4 virtual work spaces and, yes, you can use a click to get between them from that screen. The real usefulness of virtual work spaces, however, isn’t just in the availability of extra screen real estate in a virtual sense: it lies in the quickness with which you can move through them.

I’ve railed on this before, so I won’t belabor the point again. Just know that most users highly value the ability to use a gesture to get from one Virtual Desk to another. Without those gestures, you have to get to your overview screen with a 3-finger gesture, select your desktop, and click the desk you’d like to view. This workflow completely interrupts the feel of having multiple displays just sitting to either side of your main display and kills the productivity that a feature like Virtual Desks supplies.

To be fair, this latest implementation of Virtual Desks does come with all the keyboard shortcuts to move about your virtual spaces pretty quickly, so I’m very glad to see that included right out of the box this time around. You can move between desks, add/remove desks, and slide windows from one screen to an adjacent screen all with keyboard shortcuts. Here those are if you were wondering:

Search + Shift + = New desk

Search + Shift + – Remove desk

Search + ] Navigate to desk on right

Search + [ Navigate to desk on the left

Search + Shift + ] Move active window (or highlighted window in overview) to desk on the right

Search + Shift + [ Move active window (or highlighted window in overview) to desk on the left

Even with those in place, I still want to be able to move around using my trackpad for the ultimate Virtual Desk experience. A quick 3-finger swipe left or right is all it takes to move between your desk setups if you have the right settings applied, and it is beyond simple at this point to do this. All you need to do is go to chrome://flags/#enable-virtual-desks-gestures in your URL bar, click the button to enable it, and restart. After doing so, you’ll have not only the keyboard shortcuts, but also the ability to switch between desks with a simple 3-finger swipe left or right.

This does come at a bit of a cost, though. If you are used to scrubbing tabs with the same 3-finger gesture left or right, you’ll need to retrain your brain to make that a 4-finger gesture instead. For me, this is a small price to pay to be able to move around my Virtual Desks with ease and quickness, and I’m looking forward to the day when they simply implement this change and be done with it. Perhaps there’s some push back on the idea of changeing the long-standing 3-finger gesture for tab scrubbing, but they could easily remedy it by giving users the option of maintaining the 3-finger gesture for tabs and relegating the 4-finger one to Virtual Desk switching.

Either way, I hope this helps you take full advantage of this great new feature that is available to all Chrome OS users now. It’s been a long time coming, but it is nice to finally get to the point where Virtual Desks are simply part of the Chromebook experience and not a ‘coming soon’ feature any longer.