Duncan Riley

Duncan Riley is a senior writer at SiliconANGLE covering Startups, Bitcoin, and the Internet of Things. Duncan is a co-founder of VC funded media company B5Media and founder of news site The Inquisitr, and was a senior writer at TechCrunch in its earlier days. Tips? Press releases? Intersting startup? email: duncan@nichenet.com.au or contact Duncan on Twitter @duncanriley

Latest from Duncan Riley

Mira Prism headset to deliver augmented reality to iPhone users for just $99

Apple Inc. iPhone users are about to get their first augmented-reality headset, as a Los Angeles company announced Tuesday it plans to launch a product that costs just $99. The company goes by the name of Mira Labs Inc. and the product is called Prism. It’s a headset that allows iPhone users to experience augmented ...

Google rolls out new security alerts for G Suite and App Scripts

Google Inc. today rolled out a new security alert feature across its G Suite and App Scripts services following a widespread phishing attack that targeted users in May. The new alert feature aims to prevent a user accidentally click on a phishing link. It includes an added security alert delivered via a pop-up interstitial to warn ...

FBI warns parents about privacy and safety risks of Internet-connected toys

The Federal Bureau of Investigation is warning that Internet-connected toys can present privacy and safety risks to both parents and children. In a newly published advisory, the FBI said Internet-connected toys typically contain sensors, microphones, cameras, data storage components, speech recognition and GPS options that collect data, which then is typically sent and stored by the ...

Dow Jones is the latest company to expose customer records on a cloud server

Dow Jones & Co. has followed in the footsteps of Verizon Communications Inc. by leaving private customer records exposed to the public on a cloud server. Similar to Verizon, the 2.2 million records were found publicly available on an unsecured Amazon Web Services S3 bucket and were also discovered by Chris Guard of the security firm UpGuard ...

$7M stolen in hacking of CoinDash’s initial coin offering

A startup attempting to raise money through an initial coin offering has been hacked, and about $7 million worth of Ethereum tokens invested by customers has been stolen in the process. CoinDash, a company that was aiming to build a “blockchain asset social trading platform,” was attempting to raise the equivalent of $12 million from ...

Leap Motion raises $50M to advance its VR/AR hand tracking technology

Hoping to jumpstart commercial and enterprise use of its hand tracking technology, high-profile startup Leap Motion Inc. has raised $50 million in a later-stage round. Founded in 2010, Leap Motion is developing hand tracking for use in virtual and augmented reality worlds, allowing users to interact with those worlds using hand movements. The company’s technology allows computers ...

Google will push users to abandon SMS two-step verification to avoid security risks

Google Inc. is pushing users to switch from messaging-based two-step login verification to a phone-based service instead as a way to bypass the security risks of Simple Messaging Service authentication services. Beginning this week, Google will invite users of its existing so-called SMS 2-SV service to use a different login method. The alternative service, known as Google ...

Report: Amazon is working on a new messaging app called Anytime

Amazon.com Inc. wants a slice of the consumer messaging market, at least according to a report published late last week. The e-commerce and cloud computing giant apparently is developing an app that would take on services provided by Facebook Inc., Apple Inc. and Google Inc. The claim comes from AFTV News, which got its hands on ...

Google wins ruling on employee data request in wage discrimination investigation

Google Inc. got a win Friday in its ongoing dispute with the Department of Labor’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs over data on pay gaps between men and women at the company. A judge ruled that a data request by the office was “overbroad, intrusive on employee privacy, unduly burdensome and insufficiently focused on obtaining the ...

Australia wants to force tech companies to crack encrypted messages

The Australian government is preparing to introduce legislation that would attempt to force tech companies to crack encrypted messages sent by suspected terrorists, traffickers and child sex offenders. Proposed at a press conference Friday by Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull (pictured, right, with President Donald Trump), a man who made his millions through his ownership of what was once ...