YouTube reportedly now injects ads directly into video streams to make it more difficult for ad blockers to block advertisements.
Major news sites including The Washington Post, New York Magazine, and HuffPost, saw their stories now displaying porn videos instead of the once-embedded intended ones. The fiasco happened as prominent websites relied on the now-defunct domain vid.me to embed streaming videos in their articles.
This month, Amazon has announced that Mozilla will phase out support for the Firefox web browser app on Amazon's Fire TV product line.
Weak credentials and login protections come with the risk of swatting for owners of connected devices with video and voice capabilities, warns the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
Following in the footsteps on Netflix, Amazon and YouTube have also agreed to lower the video streaming quality of their services to prevent European network infrastructure from becoming overburdened.
Linux users can now stream shows and movies from the Disney+ streaming service after Disney lowering the level of their DRM requirements.