Security-Portal.cz je internetový portál zaměřený na počítačovou bezpečnost, hacking, anonymitu, počítačové sítě, programování, šifrování, exploity, Linux a BSD systémy. Provozuje spoustu zajímavých služeb a podporuje příznivce v zajímavých projektech.

Kategorie

OpenAI gets the attention it needs from AI researcher Noam Shazeer

Computerworld.com [Hacking News] - 19 min 52 sek zpět

An IT executive changing jobs usually attracts little attention outside a narrow group of people, but Noam Shazeer’s move from Google to OpenAI is as momentous as any high-value soccer transfer.

He announced the news in a post on X: “I’m excited to share that I’ll be joining OpenAI and look forward to working with the exceptional team there.”

Shazeer initially achieved fame as one of the eight co-authors of the influential AI paper Attention Is All You Need, published when he was working at Google Brain. He is also one of the creators of the transformer technology that lies at the heart of modern AI models.

He left Google when the company failed to back his chatbot Meena and was tempted back when Google subsequently bought the company he founded, Character.AI, for $2.7 billion. That company achieved notoriety when it was sued by a grieving mother, who alleged that a Character.AI chatbot had contributed to her son’s death by suicide. The company subsequently settling out of court.

Shazeer has since been working as the co-lead on Google’s Gemini project. It’s not clear what role he will play at OpenAI, but hiring someone with his background shortly before the company’s IPO could be an attractive move for investors.

Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Texas govt data breach exposes over 3 million driver’s licenses

Bleeping Computer - 29 min 48 sek zpět
The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) disclosed a data breach at its license system vendor that exposed personal information for more than three million individuals. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

AutoJack Attack Lets One Web Page Hijack AI Agent for Host Code Execution

The Hacker News - 1 hodina 11 min zpět
Microsoft researchers have detailed an exploit chain, named AutoJack, that turns an AI browsing agent into a delivery vehicle for remote code execution. Steer the agent to load an attacker's web page, and that page's JavaScript can reach a privileged local service on the same machine and spawn a process on the host. No credentials, no sign-in screen, and no further user interaction once Swati Khandelwalhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/[email protected]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Operation Endgame Disrupts SocGholish Servers, Cleans 14,971 WordPress Sites

The Hacker News - 1 hodina 34 min zpět
Dutch law enforcement authorities, along with counterparts from Canada , Germany, and the U.S., have disrupted malicious infrastructure associated with SocGholish and cleaned up nearly 15,000 infected WordPress websites. "With these actions we deprive cybercriminals of access to infected computer systems," Maikel Rollman of the Netherlands National High Tech Crime Unit said. "This preventsRavie Lakshmananhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/[email protected]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Google, Microsoft offer specs to help you prove your AI is behaving nicely

Computerworld.com [Hacking News] - 1 hodina 47 min zpět

Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, and others want to help enterprises demonstrate that their AI applications are behaving themselves through the creation of a new foundation.

The Appia Foundation will, it explained rather impenetrably, “establish modular specifications that provide a connecting layer to bridge foundational global standards with practical, trusted assessments across the global AI value chain.”

Those specifications will help AI users ascertain whether the systems they are using meet all the obligations that apply to them in the form of standards and regulations, it said. It’s a challenging task with so much regional variation in requirements, and where the EU, for example, is more tightly controlled than the US.

The Foundation has established a set of criteria to demonstrate conformity with what is expected. There are two layers: the Requirements and Guidance layers will help users determine what is actually required, while the Assessment Enablement layer will look at how those requirements are evaluated.

Appia stressed that what it is offering are not standards — which are set by recognized international bodies such as ISO/IEC — but a means of assessing what those standards mean and how they can be used by organizations. However, the Foundation said that some of the criteria that it is introducing may become standards themselves after a period of time.

The Appia Foundation is hosted by the Linux Foundation’s Joint Development Foundation, and its other members include Arm, Ericsson, Mastercard, Mitsubishi Electric, Omron, Schneider Electric, and Siemens. It is also looking to bring academics and government into the fold, so that it can establish an advisory board.

This article first appeared on CIO.

Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Microsoft broke some OLE automations with latest Windows update

Computerworld.com [Hacking News] - 2 hodiny 3 min zpět

Microsoft Office users may find that some of their applications are failing to open when called on by third-party applications. It’s an issue that has emerged after the latest round of Microsoft updates.

The problem affects Word, Excel, and other Office applications opened from third-party offerings including CCH Engagement, Workpaper Manager, Zotero, or dental office software such as Dentrix or Softdent.

The update issued on June 9 appears to have triggered problems with the OLE automation that these third-party applications use to interact with Office. Users have reported that files are failing to open, with no error message indicating what has gone wrong,

According to one Windows user forum, the issue is particularly frustrating because of this lack of error message. As one user put it, “‘Word won’t open from our workpaper system’ is functionally the same as ‘Word is broken.’ To an administrator, the difference determines whether the next hour is spent repairing Office, rolling back Windows, calling a line-of-business vendor, or opening a Microsoft support case.”

Microsoft has said that it is aware of the issue and is working towards a resolution.

Deleting mystery file

The company is also looking to fix a minor issue that has emerged from this latest round of updates: Users are finding that when items are deleted, the confirmation dialog box displays the internal Recycle Bin file name (for example, $Rxxxxx.ext) instead of the original file name. However, Microsoft stressed that in the Recycle Bin, the item still appears with its original name.

Kategorie: Hacking & Security

CISA Warns Fortinet Customers as FortiBleed Hits 86,644 FortiGate Devices

The Hacker News - 2 hodiny 42 min zpět
The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) on Thursday urged Fortinet customers with FortiGate appliances to take steps to secure against ongoing malicious activity aimed at thousands of internet-accessible devices. The sweeping campaign, believed to be the work of Russian-speaking threat actors, has been codenamed FortiBleed. The number of compromised devices stands at Ravie Lakshmananhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/[email protected]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

OpenAI adds spend controls and usage analytics to ChatGPT Enterprise

Computerworld.com [Hacking News] - 2 hodiny 43 min zpět

OpenAI has introduced spend controls and enhanced usage analytics for ChatGPT Enterprise to enable organizations to monitor AI adoption, track consumption across teams, and set budgets for AI usage. But, analysts cautioned, it still can’t show how those costs lead to business benefits.

The new features provide administrators with centralized dashboards showing how ChatGPT is being used across an organization, enabling them to understand adoption patterns, and manage AI costs by setting budgets and tracking spending.

“The Global Admin Console brings ChatGPT and Codex credit usage into one view, so admins can see a more granular breakdown of credit consumption across users, products, and models — helping them understand where spend is coming from and how it maps to actual credit usage,” OpenAI said.

A shift toward AI cost governance

The introduction of budgeting and usage analytics reflects a broader change in enterprise priorities, according to Biswajeet Mahapatra, principal analyst at Forrester.

“Enterprises are clearly shifting from adoption-led enthusiasm to cost and value governance, but this is a natural maturity transition rather than a pullback,” Mahapatra said. “AI is no longer an adoption problem but a measurement and credibility problem, with productivity gains present but fragmented and hard to tie to financial outcomes.”

As AI expands across business units, spending becomes distributed across teams, tools and experiments, making visibility and governance increasingly important, he said.

“Budgeting, usage visibility and spend controls are therefore becoming foundational, not just operational concerns, as they enable alignment between technology usage and business outcomes,” Mahapatra added.

OpenAI is addressing those needs with its new dashboards and spending controls address, he said.

Agent sprawl will add to cost control challenges

Anushree Verma, senior director analyst at Gartner, said AI cost governance is becoming a focus for enterprises, as fragmented pricing models, vendor-defined consumption units and inconsistent pricing structures make it difficult for organizations to predict AI costs.

She expects the challenge to intensify over the next few years as enterprises scale up their use of AI.

“By 2028, an average global Fortune 500 enterprise will have over 150,000 agents in use, up from less than 15 in 2025, generating significant agent sprawl, IT complexity and management challenges,” she said.

Against that backdrop, OpenAI’s new administrative capabilities provide organizations with tools to monitor organizational usage and spending as AI deployments become larger and more distributed.

Measuring AI value beyond consumption

While OpenAI’s analytics emphasize adoption patterns and usage visibility, analysts say enterprises will ultimately need to connect AI consumption with business outcomes.

“Token consumption alone is insufficient because it measures activity rather than impact,” Mahapatra said.

Instead, organizations should evaluate AI initiatives using business metrics such as revenue growth, cost reduction and risk mitigation alongside operational indicators including productivity improvements and quality gains.

Verma said traditional cloud FinOps practices are also evolving to accommodate AI’s usage-based economics.

“Traditional FinOps practices were built around predictable, centralized cloud environments and are insufficient for handling unpredictable AI consumption metrics, such as token usage, LLM requests and GPU hours,” she said.

She added that real-time tracking is becoming increasingly important as multiagent systems scale, because misconfigurations can cause AI costs to rise rapidly across interconnected environments.

This article first appeared on CIO.

Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Every AI Agent Is an Identity. Most Organizations Don't Treat Them That Way

Bleeping Computer - 3 hodiny 32 min zpět
AI agents can access data, trigger workflows, deploy code, and interact with critical business systems, often with little oversight. Token Security breaks down why AI agents are becoming a new identity and governance challenge. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Webinar: How attackers bypass MFA and how defenders can respond

Bleeping Computer - 4 hodiny 30 min zpět
Modern phishing attacks, including Device Code phishing, can undermine MFA protections and grant attackers access to corporate accounts without stealing passwords. This webinar explores how behavioral AI can help security teams detect compromised accounts faster and automate response workflows. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

From Assistive to Agentic: The AI Shift That's Redefining Threat Management

The Hacker News - 4 hodiny 44 min zpět
Introduction The average enterprise security team has 40 or more security tools, giving a lot of visibility into internal telemetry and asset data. But often, these tools are working in siloes, generating (overlapping) alerts and data. And yet, breach dwell times remain stubbornly long (~43 days), response windows keep closing before teams can act, and analysts burn out triaging noise instead [email protected]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Microsoft: June 2026 Windows updates break Recycle Bin prompts

Bleeping Computer - 5 hodin 9 min zpět
Microsoft has confirmed a confusing Windows bug that causes different filenames to appear in the confirmation dialog when deleting a file from the Recycle Bin. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

How to use Excel formulas and functions

Computerworld.com [Hacking News] - 5 hodin 42 min zpět

One of the most commonly used Microsoft programs, Excel is highly useful for data collecting, processing, and analysis. To fully harness Excel’s powers, though, you need to make use of formulas.

Excel formulas allow you to perform calculations, analyze data, and return results quickly and accurately. The usefulness of formulas is even greater once you start dealing with large data sets. With the correct formula, Excel can process vast amounts of information in a matter of seconds.

In this article we’ll look at five useful types of formulas and functions that will get you started performing data analysis in Excel. Along the way, you’ll learn several different ways to enter formulas and functions in Excel.

We’ll demonstrate using Excel for Windows under a Microsoft 365 subscription. If you’re using a different version of Excel, you might not have exactly the same interface and options, but the formulas and functions work the same.

If you have the right kind of M365 subscription, you can have Microsoft’s generative AI assistant, Copilot, create formulas for you. This requires an M365 Personal, Family, or Premium plan for individuals or an M365 business or enterprise plan with a paid Copilot add-on subscription — which means not everybody has access to Copilot in Excel. Even if you do, it’s helpful to know what formulas can do and how to work with them so you can write better prompts for Copilot. We’ll cover using Copilot to create Excel formulas later in this story, but first we’ll give you a solid understanding of how to work with formulas and functions.

In this article: What is a formula in Excel?

A formula is an expression that operates on values in a range of cells in Excel. Using formulas, you can perform calculations and data analysis on the contents of the cells. Formulas can be as simple as adding a column of numbers together or as complex as returning the kurtosis of a data set. They can be incredibly useful when you want to turn spreadsheet data into meaningful information for driving business decisions.

What is a function in Excel?

A function is a built-in formula in Excel — basically, a shortcut for performing a calculation or other operation on cell data. There are around 500 Excel functions, and the list continues to grow every year. Fortunately, most of the actions that a typical business user would want to perform can be done with just a handful of functions.

1. Basic mathematical formulas and functions

We’re going to group these formulas together since they are very simple and have similar syntax. All formulas in Excel start with the equal sign (=) and build from there.

Adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing

To add the numbers in two cells together, first click the on the target cell where you want the total to appear. Then type = in the cell to start the formula.

loading="lazy" width="400px">

Starting a formula in Excel.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Next, click on the cell that contains the first number you want to add, and its cell reference (such as A2) will appear next to the equal sign in the formula.

loading="lazy" width="400px">

When you select a cell when building a formula, its cell reference appears in the formula.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Type + next to the first cell reference. Then click the cell that contains the second number you want to add, and its cell reference (such as A3) will appear next to the + sign. The full syntax for the formula to add the values in cells A2 and A3 is:

=A2+A3

loading="lazy" width="400px">

The complete addition formula appears in both the target cell and the formula bar above.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Note that in addition to appearing in the target cell, the formula also appears in the formula bar directly above the worksheet. Once you’ve inserted the initial = sign in the target cell, you can type your formula in the formula bar. It’s sometimes easier to see the whole formula and work with it in the formula bar than down in the worksheet page.

If you wanted to add additional numbers to your total, you’d type another + sign, select another cell, and so on. Once your formula is complete, press Enter, and the result appears in the target cell.

loading="lazy" width="400px">

Press Enter, and the result appears in the target cell.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Subtraction, multiplication, and division calculations work the same way. You simply change the operator — the symbol that tells Excel what math operation you want to perform — from the + sign to the sign for subtraction, the * sign for multiplication, or the / sign for division.

loading="lazy" width="400px">

Subtraction, multiplication, and division actions. The formula for each is shown in the formulas bar and the result in the target cell.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Adding numbers with the SUM function

There’s a quicker way to add together a group of numbers. This is where Excel’s built-in SUM function comes in.

First click on the target cell where you want the total to appear. Then type =SUM to start the function.  A list of options will come up. Click the first option, SUM. You’ll now see =SUM( in the target cell.

loading="lazy" width="400px">

Starting a SUM function.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Just underneath the cell with the SUM function is a tooltip showing the SUM syntax:

=SUM(number 1, [number2],…)

To add individual cells together, select a cell, type a comma, select another cell, and so on. (Alternatively, you can type a cell reference, type a comma, type another cell reference, and so on.)

If you want to add consecutive cells (such as in a row or column), select the first cell, then hold down the Shift key and select the final cell in the group. (Or you can type in the cell references for the first and last cells separated by a colon — for instance, A2:A7 selects A2, A7, and all the cells in between.)

loading="lazy" width="400px">

Select the range of cells you want to add together.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Once all the cells you want to add together are selected, hit Enter.

Now you should see the final result, which is the sum of the numbers you highlighted. If you highlight that target cell again, you’ll see the full formula in the formula bar — in our example, it’s:

=SUM(A2:A7)

loading="lazy" width="400px">

The SUM function is shown in the formulas bar; the result appears in the target cell.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

One important thing to note for all Excel formulas is that they produce relative values. This simply means that if any of the values in the selected cells changes, then the final number will change to reflect that.

loading="lazy" width="400px">

If the value of a cell used in a formula changes, the result also changes.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

If you want to make it an absolute value, a number that will not change even if the cells that were used to calculate it change, then you need to right-click the cell and select Copy from the pop-up menu. Then right-click the cell again and, under Paste Options, select the Values button (the icon of a clipboard with 123).

loading="lazy" width="400px">

Copy and paste the value into the cell to prevent the value from changing if one of the source cell’s values changes.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Now when you select that cell you’ll just see the plain number, not a formula, in the formula bar.

loading="lazy" width="400px">

The cell now contains an absolute value, not a formula.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Tip: Excel provides a SUM shortcut in certain circumstances. If you have a series of numbers in a row or a column, Excel assumes you want to add them together. So if you place your cursor in the cell to the right of a row of numbers and click the AutoSum (Σ) button toward the right end of the Ribbon’s Home tab, Excel automatically selects the numbers in the row, then adds them together when you press Enter. Likewise, if you place your cursor in the cell below a column of numbers, click AutoSum, and hit Enter, Excel totals up the numbers in the column.

loading="lazy" width="400px">

AutoSum is a shortcut for adding a row or column of numbers.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Calculating the average with the AVERAGE function

To calculate the average of a group of numbers, repeat the same steps but using the syntax =AVERAGE and highlighting the cells containing the numbers that you want to use in the calculation.

loading="lazy" width="400px">

To quickly calculate the average of a group of numbers, use the AVERAGE function.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Tip: As with SUM, there’s a shortcut for using the AVERAGE function if you have a series of numbers in a row or a column. Place your cursor in the cell to the right of a row of numbers or in the cell below a column of numbers. Click the tiny down arrow at the right side of the AutoSum button, select Average from the menu that appears, and hit Enter. Excel calculates the average of the values in that row or column.

loading="lazy" width="400px">

There’s an AutoSum shortcut for the AVERAGE function as well.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Find more details, examples, and best practices for these functions at Microsoft’s SUM function and AVERAGE function support pages.

2. The IF function

This function helps you automate the decision-making process by applying if-then logic to your data. Using this function, you can have Excel perform a calculation or display a certain value depending on the outcome of a logical test. For example, you can create a test that checks if the value of a cell is greater than or equal to the value of 18 and enter “Yes” or “No” accordingly.

While we’re learning this function, we’ll cover another way to enter functions in Excel: by using the Formulas tab on the Ribbon. Here you’ll find buttons that provide quick access to functions by category: AutoSum, Financial, Logical, Text, Date & Time, and so on. Being able to browse through functions by category can be helpful if you can’t remember the exact name of a function or aren’t sure how to spell it.

To enter the IF function, select the target cell, and on the Formulas tab, click the Logical button, then select IF from the list of functions that appears.

Alternatively, you can click the Insert Function button all the way to the left of the Formulas tab. An “Insert Function” pane appears, showing a list of commonly used functions.

loading="lazy" width="400px">

Instead of typing = to start a function, you can go to the Formulas tab and select Insert Function.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Select IF from the list and click OK. (If the function you want isn’t in the “Commonly Used” list, select a different category or All to see all available functions.)

The Function Arguments pane appears, and you’ll see =IF() in the target cell.

loading="lazy" width="400px">

You can use the Function Arguments dialog box to build a function.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

The IF function syntax is as follows:

=IF(logical_test,”value_if_true”,”value_if_false”)

You’ll notice that the Function Arguments pane for the IF function has fields for Logical_test, Value_if_true, and Value_if_false. In our “greater than or equal to 18” example, the logical test is whether the number in the selected cell is greater than or equal to 18, the value if true is “Yes,” and the value if false is “No.” So we’d enter the following items in the pane’s fields like so:

Logical_test: B2>=18

Value_if_true: “Yes”

Value_if_false: “No”

or just type the full formula into the target cell:

=IF(B2>=18,”Yes”,”No”)

This tells Excel that if the value of cell B2 is greater than or equal to 18, it should enter “Yes” in the target cell. If the value of cell B2 is less than 18, it should enter “No.”

loading="lazy" width="400px">

The IF function in action.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Tip: When using functions like this, rather than entering the function repeatedly for each row, you can simply click and drag the tiny square on the bottom right of the cell that contains the function. Doing so will autofill each of the rows with the formula, and Excel will change your cell references to match. For example, when the formula we used in cell C2 that references cell B2 is autofilled into cell C3, it changes to reference cell B3 automatically.

loading="lazy" width="400px">

Autofilling a formula to subsequent rows in the column.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Find more details at Microsoft’s IF function support page.

3. The SUMIF and COUNTIF functions

SUMIF is a more advanced SUM function that allows you to add up only the values in a range that meet the criteria you specify. To use this function, you must specify the range of cells to apply the criteria to, the criteria for inclusion, and, optionally, the sum range, which is the range of cells to total if that’s different from the initial range. The syntax is as follows:

=SUMIF(range,criteria,[sum_range])

Note that any criteria with text or mathematical or logical symbols must be enclosed in double quotes.

In the sales spreadsheet shown below, for example, suppose you want to total up only the sales that are more than $100. The criteria range is C2 to C9, and the criteria is “greater than 100.” Since you’re adding up the values in that same cell range (C2 to C9), you don’t need to supply a separate sum range. So your formula is:

=SUMIF(C2:C9,”>100″)

loading="lazy" width="400px">

Using the SUMIF function.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

What if instead you want to find the total for all sales in the East region only? To do that you’ll have to specify both the criteria range (cells B2 to B9) and the sum range (cells C2 to C9). This is the formula:

=SUMIF(B2:B9,B2,C2:C9)

Note that you don’t have to type out “East” for the criteria. You can simply type B2 or click the cell B2 to have Excel search for the text it contains.

loading="lazy" width="400px">

Using SUMIF with both a criteria range and a sum range.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

There is a similar function called COUNTIF that lets you create a count of values that meet specified criteria. The syntax is as follows:

=COUNTIF(range,criteria)

So to count the total number of sales in the West region, for instance, you supply the range of cells to apply the criteria to (B2 to B9), followed by the criteria (“West” or cell B3). The formula is:

=COUNTIF(B2:B9,B3)

loading="lazy" width="400px">

The COUNTIF function can instantly count up items that meet your criteria.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

What if you want to apply multiple criteria to your data, such as calculating total sales for books in the East region, or counting the number of sales over $100 in the West region? Excel can do that too, via functions called SUMIFS and COUNTIFS. These functions use more complex syntax than SUMIF and COUNTIF. For more details, use cases, and best practices for all four of these functions, see Microsoft’s SUMIF, SUMIFS, COUNTIF, and COUNTIFS support pages.

4. The CONCAT function

This function is useful for piecing together text from different cells into one complete string. For instance, maybe you have a worksheet with different columns for people’s first and last names, but you want to put first and last names together. Other common use cases are completing an address, reference number, file path, or URL. The syntax is as follows:

=CONCAT(text1,text2,text3,…)

In this example we will use CONCAT to combine a list of first names and last names into a full name with a space in between. To do so we simply place the cursor in cell C2, type =CON and select CONCAT from the list of options that appears. Next, select the cell that contains the first name (A2) and add a comma, a blank space surrounded by quotation marks, and another comma. Then add the last name by selecting the adjacent cell (B2) and hit Enter. Here’s the full formula:

=CONCAT(A2,” “,B2)

Next, click and drag the bottom right of cell C2 to autofill the formula in all the other rows.

loading="lazy" width="400px">

The CONCAT function combined the values from column A with those from column B.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

For more details and examples, see Microsoft’s CONCAT function support page.

5. The VLOOKUP function

This is one of the most commonly used functions in Excel and a valuable data analysis tool. VLOOKUP lets you look up a value in a table and return information from other columns related to that value. It’s very useful for combining data from different lists or comparing two lists to find matching items. To use this function, you need to provide three to four pieces of information:

  1. The value you want to look for. This is known as the lookup value.
  2. The range of cells to look in. This is known as the table array.
  3. The column that contains the information you want to return, called the column index number.
  4. Optionally, the type of lookup you want to perform: TRUE or FALSE. This is known as the range lookup. FALSE means you want an exact match for the lookup value, while picking TRUE returns the best approximate match. If you don’t specify a range lookup, VLOOKUP defaults to TRUE.

The syntax is as follows:

=VLOOKUP(lookup_value,table_array,column_index_number,[range_lookup])

The lookup value must be in the first column of cells you specify in the table array. The leftmost column in the table array has a column index number of 1, with subsequent columns numbered 2, 3, and so on.

In this example, we’ll look up what region our employees work in. To do so, we first need to specify the value that we are going to search for: the employee name Mike (cell A2). Next, we need to highlight the entire cell range (table array) that we want to look in: cells F2:G8.

Then we specify which column holds the information that we want. Rather than picking the column itself, we count from left to right within the table array. Since the column that contains the region is the second from the left, type in 2.

Lastly, we enter the TRUE (best approximate match) or FALSE (exact match) option. TRUE is typically only used with numbers or when you aren’t sure if the value you want is in the table. Since we know the value we want is in the table, we will pick FALSE. Generally, FALSE is the better option, as it returns more accurate results.

This is the full formula:

=VLOOKUP(A2,F2:G8,2,FALSE)

loading="lazy" width="400px">

Use VLOOKUP to find values linked to other values in large data sets.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

This is an oversimplified example using a small data set, but when you need to search through a spreadsheet with thousands (or tens of thousands) of cells, VLOOKUP is a huge time-saver and reduces the possibility of errors. For more details and examples, see Microsoft’s VLOOKUP function support page.

Using Copilot to create Excel formulas

Remembering all these different formulas and functions can be difficult, so another good approach for those who have access to Copilot in Excel (see details at the top of this story) is to use the AI tool to dynamically create formulas that meet your needs. Using Copilot, you can describe what you want the formula to do  and have the AI generate the syntax for you. In this section we’ll demonstrate with two sample data sets.

To access Copilot, click the Copilot icon on your ribbon toolbar or at the bottom right of your screen.

width="979" height="511" sizes="auto, (max-width: 979px) 100vw, 979px">

To invoke Copilot, click its icon, which you might find in the ribbon toolbar up top or floating at the bottom right of your Excel window.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

The Copilot sidebar opens along the right side of your spreadsheet. Type in a prompt describing the formula you want created — in this example, a simple formula that adds up all the sales values in the data set. Be sure to instruct Copilot where to place the formula:

Create a formula in B7 that sums all of the sales

Describe the formula you want Copilot to create.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Click the submit arrow in the chat window, and Copilot will create and insert the formula to give you the result you want.

Copilot has inserted the correct Excel formula for the sum operation, with the result appearing in cell B7.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

That was a simple one. Now try a more advanced example working from a more complex data set, as shown in the screenshot below.

A more complex data set for our second example.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

Try the following prompt:

Create a formula in G2 that calculates total revenue per unit while accounting for the discount on each purchase. Then fill the formula down for all rows and create a summary table showing total revenue by Region.

Click the submit arrow, and it should create something like this:

Copilot creates the requested formula and fills in the results.

Shimon Brathwaite / Foundry

(There’s a lot more you can have Copilot can do in Excel besides creating formulas. See our story “11 cool things Copilot can do in Excel.”)

Tip: It’s not required, but it can be helpful to format your spreadsheet as a table when working with Copilot. This helps define more clearly the exact cells for Copilot to use when it creates formulas or takes other actions on your data.

You’re just getting started

In this story you’ve seen how powerful formulas and functions can be in Excel — and we’ve only the scratched the surface of what they can do. Once you get comfortable using them, you can explore some of the myriad prebuilt functions Excel offers and learn how to build more complex formulas (including nesting functions). That’s all beyond the scope of this article, but a great place to start is Microsoft’s “Overview of formulas in Excel” support page, which includes links to several helpful tutorials.

For those who have access to it in Excel, experimenting with Copilot is another great way to learn. You can review the steps it took and the formulas it created to get a better understanding of how formulas work and what they’re capable of.

This story was originally published in May 2023 and updated in June 2026.

More Excel tips and how-tos:
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

CISA: Splunk Enterprise flaw actively exploited, patch by Sunday

Bleeping Computer - 6 hodin 2 min zpět
CISA has urged U.S. federal agencies to secure their systems by Sunday against a critical Splunk Enterprise vulnerability that is being exploited in attacks. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Forget Data Leakage: Shadow AI's Real Threat Is Access Control

The Hacker News - 6 hodin 12 min zpět
The first wave of enterprise AI concern was straightforward. It was simply employees pasting sensitive data into public AI tools. Security teams responded with usage policies, domain blocks, and data loss prevention rules. That response made sense at the time. It doesn't fit the problem anymore. Shadow AI has shifted from a data leakage concern to an access control problem. The threat isn't [email protected]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Q&A: Temporal aims to be the reliability backbone for an agentic AI economy

Computerworld.com [Hacking News] - 6 hodin 42 min zpět

As AI shifts from output-generating large language models (LLMs) to armies of agents taking actions on their own, there is a growing threat that failures could affect system reliability.

Temporal, a Bellevue, WA firm founded in 2019, hopes to solve that problem by stabilizing AI and long-running computing processes through “durable execution,” a technology that reliably resurrects failed computing processes on other hosts. If a machine crashes in the middle of agentic AI transactions, the company resurrects the function on a different host so it can continue exactly where it left off. Temporal says its durable execution process comes with a 100% durability guarantee.

The company was solving these kinds of distributed-systems problems long before the generative AI (genAI) rush, and today it powers infrastructure from Coinbase to Airbnb to OpenAI.

For IT decision-makers, Temporal’s offerings promise to bring reliability to AI operations — especially in regulated industries. Co-founder Samar Abbas spoke recently with Computerworld about his company’s technology, AI reliability, execution and what IT leaders need to keep in mind when evaluating and deploying agentic AI.

Temporal Co-founder Samar Abbas

AWS

How did Temporal come to be a backbone powering AI system? “OpenAI recently announced we power many of their products underneath the cover — that’s where Temporal comes in.

“A couple of years ago, as LLMs got smarter, use cases were about generating outputs. Now, the industry is moving into agentic solutions, where AI isn’t just generating outputs, it’s taking actions. The longer these systems run, the more tools they invoke and the more value they create. 

“They’re evolving into a whole army of agents coordinating to get complex tasks done. This starts to look like distributed systems. We become that execution authority, the reliability backbone for those agentic systems to get their tasks done from A to Z.”

What is Temporal doing in the backend to keep them stable? “It’s a new paradigm for building applications, we call that durable execution. If you write a function and a failure happens, you lose all of your state. When a machine crashes, we maintain the state. We seamlessly resurrect that function on a different host and continue executing exactly where it left off, without you as a developer writing a single line of code. 

“It’s not just a cache, it’s an operating system guaranteeing execution in the presence of failure. We provide 100% durability guarantees behind it. People can use it for mission-critical use cases like transcribing doctor conversations, where even losing one [word] has big implications.”

Did this challenge exist before AI? “My co-founder and I have been at it pretty much our entire careers, spanning almost three decades. We’ve been solving this problem of distributed systems, at Amazon, Microsoft and then Uber, before starting Temporal. We are definitely pre-AI. 

“As more workloads move to cloud and become distributed, it introduces this class of failures. This is the fifth time I’m building this system. I built simple workflow, then [a] durable task framework at Azure, then Cadence at Uber, now Temporal. The company is roughly seven years old, but the code base is over 10 years old, because we started at Uber and it’s been running in production ever since.”

And now you tackle that same problem at AI scale? “The funny thing is, especially with AI, that same problem is now at such a massive scale, it’s gone on steroids, with agentic systems coming online and doing real work. We’ve been powering every Coinbase transaction, every Snap story, every Airbnb booking, every Yum Brands order —  KFC, Pizza Hut, Taco Bell.

“A couple of years ago, it looked like we’d over-invested in the scale and reliability of the platform. Then AI showed up in such a big way that now I’m asking the team: how do we scale another 10x, 100x, even 1000x? These agents are hitting the market in a way we couldn’t have imagined.”

Can you give a concrete example of that 100% guarantee? “When you’re moving money — debit or credit — imagine a failure happens after you’ve debited an account. Temporal guarantees execution of the entire function from start to finish, in the presence of all sorts of failures. At the end of the day, we’re in the business of selling reliability. 

“Developers today spend 80% of their time building resiliency into their systems by working with low-level primitives like queues, databases, retry mechanisms and durable timers, and stitching them together. What we provide eliminates that. And that reliability is exactly what’s becoming critical as enterprises move agents into production.”

Why should CIOs and other IT leaders care about AI reliability? “These agents are now real, no longer prototypes or [proofs of concept]. They’re doing meaningful work in those organizations. Reliability and durability weren’t on the radar for CIOs 12 months ago. Now, it’s the blocker. Especially in regulated industries, if a transaction gets left in the middle, it has real regulatory concerns. 

“That’s what’s holding them back from transitioning into the AI stage. It comes up in pretty much every conversation, in the first 10 minutes I’m talking to a CIO.”

CW: Where do the hardest problems sit today? “Security, governance, identity, authorization, authentication. This is where majority of the problems exist, and the ecosystem is so immature. Even things like MCP, I see organizations struggling to implement MCPs to build these agents. This is an area ripe for innovation and a lot of work, including here at Temporal.”

What skills should developers and CIOs build for the AI age? “The biggest skill now is that developers need to be more product focused. Product-minded engineers are the ones who will thrive, because the whole software development flow, writing code by hand, debugging by hand, testing it, is going to look completely different. The job of an engineer is now building the system that builds the system. 

“Two things are happening in this AI world. First, a lot more engineers are coming into the fold, because companies like Replit or Lovable are making software development approachable for people who haven’t been professionally trained. Second, there’s going to be a lot more applications written than ever before. The problem space is shifting toward how we run all those applications safely and reliably, with all the guardrails. That’s where the industry is headed.”

Kategorie: Hacking & Security

How to bring the best Android 17 features to any Android phone today

Computerworld.com [Hacking News] - 6 hodin 57 min zpět

Google’s latest and greatest Android version is officially now out in the world and available — but if you’re using any phone other than a Pixel, that doesn’t mean much for you just yet.

The reason why is simple: Despite Google officially launching Android 17 and starting to send it out to Android phone-owners this week, it’s up to each individual device-maker to process the software and deliver it to its customers. And outside of Google itself, unfortunately, most Android device-makers are exasperatingly unreliable about making that happen — some of ’em to almost comically bad extremes (insert exaggerated sigh here).

Hold the phone, though — ’cause there is some good news here: While we can’t force any Android phone-maker to start treating software support as a priority, we can get creative and find ways to bring interesting new Android features to devices running older Android versions. In fact, all four of the Android 17 features I called out earlier this week can be emulated on any Android phone this instant. All it takes is a teensy pinch of inspiration and a dash of tenacity — and, of course, the right roadmap to make it all come together.

The tenacity’s on you, but if you’re game, I’ve got your roadmap ready. Here’s exactly how to enjoy a similar sort of Android-17-style sorcery on whatever phone you’re using right now — as far as some of the more surface-level highlights, at least — without having the actual Android 17 upgrade in front of you.

[Get fresh Android tips in your inbox with my free Android Intelligence newsletter — one new and useful thing to try every Friday!]

Android 17 feature #1: Bubbles multitasking magic

The most shape-shifting Android 17 of all, without a doubt, is Bubbles — a snazzy new way to turn any app into a floating, collapsible window that’s readily available for on-demand access but also out of your hair when you aren’t actively using it.

Android 17’s Bubbles multitasking system in action.

JR Raphael, Foundry

I wrote about Bubbles and ways to achieve similar feats just a few months back. It’s surprisingly easy to accomplish, even without Android 17 in the picture.

Look over this list of crafty Bubbles-bringing workarounds and see which makes the most sense for you. One way or another, you’ll find yourself facing a fantastic new option for multitasking anytime you want it — no waiting or out-of-reach upgrades required.

Android 17 feature #2: Smarter location access

Our next Android 17 addition is a little trickier to emulate without the actual operating system update in the equation. But fear not, for this is Android — and when there’s a will, there’s a way.

The feature of which we speak is an expansion of Android’s framework for how apps can access your location. It’s a two-parter: First, whenever any app is accessing your location, you’ll now see a blue dot appear in the upper-right corner of your screen — and if you swipe down once from the top of your screen to open your notification panel, you can actually tap on the location icon that appears in its place to get detailed info about exactly which app or apps are involved. Second, when an app asks to access your precise location, Android 17 adds in the option to allow such access only temporarily — for that one brief moment and purpose — without giving the app permanent permission for ongoing use.

The second part, unfortunately, is challenging to achieve without Android 17 being present. But the first part is something we can make happen with a sliver of creative zest.

The trick revolves around a classic third-party app called Privacy Dashboard. Privacy Dashboard came about back in the Android 12 era, when Google first introduced a full-fledged privacy dashboard into Android and certain devices were lagging behind and taking too long to adopt it.

With Android 12 now being five years old, the app hasn’t had much need in recent years — until now. Interestingly enough, the ability to see full details about ongoing location access and then tap to adjust the associated app’s settings is something Privacy Dashboard has long offered. And it’s consequently a great way to bring that newfound native ability from Android 17 onto a device running an older Android version.

The catch is that because of the limited need for the app all this time, it’s no longer being actively developed — and as a result, if you hadn’t previously downloaded it, the Play Store will probably give you an error saying it’s made for an older Android version and can’t be installed on your device.

It will still work, though, and it’s perfectly functional and effective.

Provided you’re comfortable and that this won’t violate any of your company-associated policies, you can download the original verified Privacy Dashboard app package from my own personal Drive storage. I saved it using the Google Files file manager and then uploaded it directly to Drive. It’s quite literally the same exact app you’d get from the Play Store, if the Play Store would let you download it — and while I wouldn’t often advise installing apps from unknown sources, I don’t exactly consider myself to be “unknown” (most of the time). So as long as you share that same trust, you can grab the app from me and put it on any device you want.

Once you get the app installed and give it the permissions it needs to operate, open ‘er up and tap the “App Settings” options on its main screen. Tap the line that says “Indicator Customization,” beneath “Privacy Indicators,” then flip the toggle next to “Click action” into the on and active position.

Aaaaand, that’s it: Anytime an app is accessing your location, you’ll see a green location icon appear in the upper-right corner of your screen. And tapping it will take you to the system-level timeline of exactly which apps have accessed your location recently, for added context.

Privacy Dashboard was ahead of its time with its Android-17-reminiscent location access indicators.

JR Raphael, Foundry

Before you install Privacy Dashboard, you might also want to try just opening an app that you know accesses your location — like Google Maps — and seeing what, if any, indicator appears in the corner of your screen and if you can tap it. While that ability is technically associated with Android 17, it was actually included in an earlier Android quarterly update, and it’s possible your device may already have that piece of the puzzle in place even if it isn’t yet running Android 17.

Android 17 feature #3: More dynamic dark mode

Android’s dark mode is better than ever as of Android 17, with a nifty new way to force each and every app to respect your device-wide dark mode setting and adjust its interface to a less glary look — even if it doesn’t technically support the option.

Dark mode in Android 17 includes a useful new “Expanded” option.

JR Raphael, Foundry

Well, get this: If your phone’s Android software is reasonably recent, it’s entirely possible you can unlock the very same function by adjusting a few out-of-sight system settings.

Try this:

  • First, you’ll need enable Android’s developer options, if you haven’t done that previously.
    • That’s a special, typically hidden section of Android’s system settings with all sorts of advanced options that aren’t typically intended for average phone-usin’ folk to futz around with.
    • There’s no risk to you or your phone with enabling ’em, and as long as you follow the instructions here exactly and enable only the one single setting we’re about to go over, it’s actually quite easy. (It’s also quite easy to undo, if you ever decide you aren’t into it and want to go back.) But we are pokin’ around in an area of Android that’s meant mostly for developers, and if you veer off-course and mess with the wrong setting, you could make a mess — so follow the steps closely, capisce?
  • The process for enabling Android’s developer options may sound strange, but I swear it works: Head into the “About phone” section of your system settings, tap “Software information,” if needed, then find the line that says “Build number.” Tap your finger on it seven times, then enter your PIN or password, if prompted, and confirm that you want to activate the developer options.
  • Now, go back to your main settings screen and either tap on the “Developer options” that appears within that list or tap “System” and then tap “Developer options” from there.
  • Scroll down through that section until you see an option called “Force Dark mode.” Flip the toggle next to it.
Android’s developer settings holds the secret to Android-17-style “Extended” dark mode, even on older Android versions.

JR Raphael, Foundry

And there ya have it: You should now be able to open any app, even if it doesn’t officially support dark mode, and see it shift into a darkened state whenever you have dark mode enabled at the system level. 

Easy peasy, no?

Android 17 feature #4: A more comfy all-around view

Our final Android 17 feature is a saucy little somethin’ called Comfort View. It applies a softer, pastel-oriented filter to your display with automatic adjustments based on your current viewing environment in order to make your screen easier on the eyes.

If you’re using a Samsung device, you may already have something similar in place even with an older Android version. Look in the Display section of your system settings and see if you see something called “Adaptive color tone,” then try activating it if it’s there — and/or look for “Screen mode” and play around with some of the settings in that area to see vaguely similar sorts of adjustments. It isn’t quite as intelligent or automatic as the new incoming Android-level equivalent, but it’s a start!

In any other scenario — or if you just want more nuance and control, even with a Samsung gizmo — grab an app called Twilight. It’ll let you tweak all sorts of specifics about the appearance of your screen, and while it’s presented mostly for nighttime optimization, you can use those same controls to create your own custom modes for any scenario imaginable.

Twilight can help you recreate effects similar to Android 17’s Comfort View.

JR Raphael, Foundry

The app doesn’t collect or share any manner of data, and while it does offer a $10 Pro upgrade, the free version is perfectly functional for most purposes.

And with that, give yourself a pat on the back: Your phone is officially now set up to showcase some of Android 17’s finest flavors — even without the software itself being available to you yet.

That, my friend, is quite an accomplishment. Well done.

Don’t stop there: Come check out my free Android Intelligence newsletter to get something new and useful in your inbox every Friday — and get my awesome Android Notification Power-Pack today.

Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Salesforce Disables Klue App Integration After OAuth Token Abuse Exposes Customer Data

The Hacker News - 7 hodin 38 min zpět
Salesforce has revealed that it disabled the Klue Battlecards app integration within its platform in response to a security incident impacting the competitive intelligence company on June 11, 2026. To that end, organizations will be unable to connect to Salesforce via the app until further notice, the American cloud-based software company noted in an alert published this week. "Salesforce tookRavie Lakshmananhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/[email protected]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

NY man charged after harassing college student with AI-generated nudes

Bleeping Computer - 7 hodin 58 min zpět
A New York man faces cyberstalking charges after allegedly sharing AI-generated nude images and fabricated racist messages using fake social media profiles to harass a Georgia college student. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

CISA warns Fortinet users to secure devices after FortiBleed leak

Bleeping Computer - 9 hodin 54 min zpět
The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) urged Fortinet customers to secure their devices after nearly 74,000 firewall and VPN credentials were exposed in a data leak dubbed "FortiBleed." [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security
Syndikovat obsah