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Best Black Friday 2018 iPhone deals: $400 iPhone X gift card, BOGO iPhone XR, and more

Black Friday is nearly here, and that means huge discounts are coming to your favorite devices. Yes, even the iPhone. Apple may be notoriously stingy when it comes to Black Friday deals and marking down its smartphones, but that doesn’t mean carriers and retailers aren’t generous.
Also: Best Black Friday 2018 deals: Business Bargain Hunter’s top picks
We’ve already spotted tons of sales, and some of them lob hundreds of dollars off the top models or come with perks like gift cards. Everything from the latest models, including the iPhone XR, iPhone XS, and iPhone XS Max, all the way down to the iPhone SE, are on sale.
CNET: Best Black Friday deals | Best Holiday gifts 2018 | Best TVs for the holidays
Some sales start as early as Nov. 16, while others will go live from Thanksgiving (Nov. 22) through to Cyber Monday (Nov. 26). Make sure you watch when sales start and end. If you want to see deals specifically for other phones, go here.
We also have more Black Friday deals here.
Best Black Friday 2018 Apple iPhone deals
(Image: ZDNet)
Verizon: Buy one iPhone, get an iPhone XR (or up to $750 off iPhone X)
Verizon’s offer works this way: Buy one of the new iPhone models (on a new line of service), and get a free iPhone XR. Or, you can open a new line of service and get $750 off any iPhone X, iPhone XS, or iPhone XS Max. Savings appear as monthly bill credits over two years.
This sale is now live.
Read the review: Apple iPhone XR review: Lower cost comes with camera compromises
(Image: ZDNet)
T-Mobile: Free iPhone XR, 8, or 8 Plus (or up to $750 off X models)
If you have one or more phone lines through T-Mobile, you can add another and trade in your old phone to get a “free” iPhone XR, iPhone 8, or iPhone 8 Plus for use on that additional line. You can also get up to $750 off the iPhone X, iPhone XS, or iPhone XS Max with this deal.
The sale begins Nov. 16. Read the details here.
Read the review: iPhone 8 review: More of the same, but better
(Image: ZDNet)
Walmart: $400 gift card with iPhone X, iPhone 8, or iPhone 8 Plus
Technically, the iPhone in this deal isn’t reduced. You must pay full price for an iPhone X, 8, or 8 Plus, which you’ll you need to activate through AT&T, Sprint, or Verizon. However, you will get a $400 gift card at Walmart with your purchase. This offer applies to in-store only.
The sale starts Nov. 22 and lasts until Nov. 23.
Read the review: Apple iPhone X review: This is as good as it gets
(Image: ZDNet)
Walmart: $300 gift card with iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max, or iPhone XR
This deal is nearly identical to the one above, only it includes Apple’s latest models (iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max, and iPhone XR) and a free $300 gift card from Walmart. Again, you’ll need to activate through AT&T, Sprint or Verizon. The offer still applies to in-store purchases.
The sale starts Nov. 22 and lasts until Nov. 23.
Read the review: Two weeks, too big: Goodbye Apple iPhone XS Max
(Image: ZDNet)
Best Buy: Save $150 on iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max, or iPhone XR
Apple’s newest iPhone models are normally hard to find discounted, but for Black Friday, they’re $150 off at Best Buy. It requires qualified activation with AT&T, Sprint, or Verizon.
The sale starts Nov. 22.
Also: iPhone XR outshines XS value for upgraders
(Image: ZDNet)
Best Buy: Save $200 on iPhone X
Got your eye on last year’s iPhone X model? Then head to Best Buy this Black Friday and save $200. Again, the deal requires activation on AT&T, Verizon, Sprint.
The sale starts Nov. 22.
Read the review: One month with the Apple iPhone X: More powerful than a Plus
(Image: ZDNet)
Best Buy: Save $200 on iPhone 6S
This phone is getting a bit long in the tooth, but for $100, you can’t beat it. You can choose between Simple Mobile and Total Wireless as your service providers.
This sale begins Nov. 22.
Read the review: Apple iPhone 6s Plus review: The most significant ‘s’ upgrade
(Image: ZDNet)
Best Buy or Walmart: iPhone SE for $80 (save $60)
Apple’s smallest iPhone may be a couple years old, but it’s a great budget device and perfect for kids or anyone who wants the iPhone experience without the price tag. It costs $80 from both Best Buy (on Simple Mobile’s service) and Walmart (Family Mobile service).
At Best Buy, the sale starts Nov. 22. At Walmart, it starts online Nov. 21 or in stores on Nov. 22.
Read the review: Apple iPhone SE review: Back to the future
(Image: ZDNet)
Target: $250 gift card with iPhone XS or iPhone XS Max
Just like Walmart, Target is offering gift cards with the purchase of an iPhone. In this case, if you buy an iPhone XS or iPhone XS Max, you’ll get a $250 gift card. It applies to in-store purchases only, and qualified activation is required on AT&T, Sprint, or Verizon.
The sale starts Nov. 23 and lasts until Nov. 25 Limited to two phones per customer.
Read the review: iPhone XS Max review: The iPhone’s future is big and bright
(Image: ZDNet)
Target: $150 gift card with iPhone X, iPhone 8, or iPhone 8 Plus
You can also get last years’ iPhone models (iPhone X, 8, or 8 Plus) with Target’s gift card promo this Black Friday. Just pick up any model, and you’ll get a $150 card. It applies to in-store purchases only, and qualified activation is required on AT&T, Sprint, or Verizon.
The sale starts Nov. 23 and lasts until Nov. 25 Limited to two phones per customer.
Read the review: iPhone 8 Plus Review: Bigger is better
For more great deals on devices, gadgetry, and technology for your enterprise, business, or home office, see ZDNet’s Business Bargain Hunter blog. Affiliate disclosure: ZDNet earns commission from the products and services featured on this page.
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Cymulate snaps up $70M to help cybersecurity teams stress test their networks with attack simulations – TechCrunch

The cost of cybercrime has been growing at an alarming rate of 15% per year, projected to reach $10.5 trillion by 2025. To cope with the challenges that this poses, organizations are turning to a growing range of AI-powered tools to supplement their existing security software and the work of their security teams. Today, a startup called Cymulate — which has built a platform to help those teams automatically and continuously stress test their networks against potential attacks with simulations, and provide guidance on how to improve their systems to ward off real attacks — is announcing a significant round of growth funding after seeing strong demand for its tools.
The startup — founded in Tel Aviv, with a second base in New York — has raised $70 million, a Series D that it will be using to continue expanding globally and investing in expanding its technology (both organically and potentially through acquisitions).
Today, Cymulate’s platform covers both on-premise and cloud networks, providing breach and attack simulations for endpoints, email and web gateways and more; automated “red teaming”; and a “purple teaming” facility to create and launch different security breach scenarios for organizations that lack the resources to dedicate people to a live red team — in all, a “holistic” solution for companies looking to make sure they are getting the most out of the network security architecture that they already have in place, in the worlds of Eyal Wachsman, Cymulate’s CEO.
“We are providing our customers with a different approach for how to do cybersecurity and get insights [on] all the products already implemented in a network,” he said in an interview. The resulting platform has found particular traction in the current market climate. Although companies continue to invest in their security architecture, security teams are also feeling the market squeeze, which is impacting IT budgets, and sometimes headcount in an industry that was already facing a shortage of expertise. (Cymulate cites figures from the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology that estimate a shortfall of 2.72 million security professionals in the workforce globally.)
The idea with Cymulate is that it’s built something that helps organizations get the most out of what they already have. “And at the end, we provide our customers the ability to prioritize where they need to invest, in terms of closing gaps in their environment,” Wachsman said.
The round is being led by One Peak, with Susquehanna Growth Equity (SGE), Vertex Ventures Israel, Vertex Growth and strategic backer Dell Technologies Capital also participating. (All five also backed Cymulate in its $45 million Series C last year.) Relatively speaking, this is a big round for Cymulate, doubling its total raised to $141 million, and while the startup is not disclosing its valuation, I understand from sources that it is around the $500 million mark.
Wachsman noted that the funding is coming on the heels of a big year for the startup (the irony being that the constantly escalating issue of cybersecurity and growing threat landscape spells good news for companies built to combat that). Revenues have doubled, although it’s not disclosing any numbers today, and the company is now at over 200 employees and works with some 500 paying customers across the enterprise and mid-market, including NTT, Telit, and Euronext, up from 300 customers a year ago.
Wachsman, who co-founded the company with Avihai Ben-Yossef and Eyal Gruner, said he first thought of the idea of building a platform to continuously test an organization’s threat posture in 2016, after years of working in cybersecurity consulting for other companies. He found that no matter how much effort his customers and outside consultants put into architecting security solutions annually or semi-annually, those gains were potentially lost each time a malicious hacker made an unexpected move.
“If the bad guys decided to penetrate the organization, they could, so we needed to find a different approach,” he said. He looked to AI and machine learning for the solution, a complement to everything already in the organization, to build “a machine that allows you to test your security controls and security posture, continuously and on demand, and to get the results immediately… one step before the hackers.”
Last year, Wachsman described Cymulate’s approach to me as “the largest cybersecurity consulting firm without consultants,” but in reality the company does have its own large in-house team of cybersecurity researchers, white-hat hackers who are trying to find new holes — new bugs, zero days and other vulnerabilities — to develop the intelligence that powers Cymulate’s platform.
These insights are then combined with other assets, for example the MITRE ATT&CK framework, a knowledge base of threats, tactics and techniques used by a number of other cybersecurity services, including others building continuous validation services that compete with Cymulate. (Competitors include the likes of FireEye, Palo Alto Networks, Randori, AttackIQ and many more.)
Cymulate’s work comes in the form of network maps that detail a company’s threat profile, with technical recommendations for remediation and mitigations, as well as an executive summary that can be presented to financial teams and management who might be auditing security spend. It also has built tools for running security checks when integrating any services or IT with third parties, for instance in the event of an M&A process or when working in a supply chain.
Today the company focuses on network security, which is big enough in itself but also leaves the door open for Cymulate to acquire companies in other areas like application security — or to build that for itself. “This is something on our roadmap,” said Wachsman.
If potential M&A leads to more fundraising for Cymulate, it helps that the startup is in one of the handful of categories that are going to continue to see a lot of attention from investors.
“Cybersecurity is clearly an area that we think will benefit from the current macroeconomic environment, versus maybe some of the more capital-intensive businesses like consumer internet or food delivery,” said David Klein, a managing partner at One Peak. Within that, he added, “The best companies [are those] that are mission critical for their customers… Those will continue to attract very good multiples.”
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Open-source password manager Bitwarden raises $100M – TechCrunch

Bitwarden, an open-source password manager for enterprises and consumers, has raised $100 million in a round of funding led by PSG, with participation form Battery Ventures.
Founded initially back in 2015, Santa Barbara, California-based Bitwarden operates in a space that includes well-known incumbents including 1Password, which recently hit a $6.8 billion valuation off the back of a $620 million fundraise, and Lastpass, which was recently spun out as an independent company again two years after landing in the hands of private equity firms.
In a nutshell, Bitwarden and its ilk make it easier for people to generate secure passwords automatically, and store all their unique passwords and sensitive information such as credit card data in a secure digital vault, saving them from reusing the same insecure password across all their online accounts.
Bitwarden’s big differentiator, of course, lies in the fact that it’s built atop an open-source codebase, which for super security-conscious individuals and businesses is a good thing — they can fully inspect the inner-workings of the platform. Moreover, people can contribute back to the codebase and expedite development of new features.
On top of a basic free service, Bitwarden ships a bunch of paid-for premium features and services, including advanced enterprise features like single sign-on (SSO) integrations and identity management.

Bitwarden
It’s worth noting that today’s “minority growth investment” represents Bitwarden’s first substantial external funding in its seven year history, though we’re told that it did raise a small undisclosed series A round back in 2019. Its latest cash injection is indicative of how the world has changed in the intervening years. The rise of remote work, with people increasingly meshing personal and work accounts on the same devices, means the same password is used across different services. And such poor password and credential hygiene puts businesses at great risk.
Additionally, growing competition and investments in the management space means that Bitwarden can’t rest on its laurels — it needs to expand, and that is what its funds will be used for. Indeed, Bitwarden has confirmed plans to extend its offering into several aligned security and privacy verticals, including secrets management — something that 1Password expanded into last year via its SecretHub acquisition.
“The timing of the investment is ideal, as we expand into opportunities in developer secrets, passwordless technologies, and authentication,” Bitwarden CEO Michael Crandell noted in a press release. “Most importantly, we aim to continue to serve all Bitwarden users for the long haul.”
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downgrade the ‘middle-men’ resellers – TechCrunch

As well as the traditional carbon offset resellers and exchanges such as Climate Partner or Climate Impact X the tech space has also produced a few, including Patch (US-based, raised $26.5M) and Lune (UK-based, raised $4M).
Now, Ceezer, a B2B marketplace for carbon credits, has closed a €4.2M round, led by Carbon Removal Partners with participation of impact-VC Norrsken VC and with existing investor Picus Capital.
Ceezer ’s pitch is that companies have to deal with a lot of complexity when considering how they address carbon removal and reduction associated with their businesses. Whie they can buy offsetting credits, the market remains pretty ‘wild-west’, and has multiple competing standards running in parallel. For instance, the price range of $5 to $500 per ton is clearly all over the place, and sometimes carbon offset resellers make buyers pay high prices for low-quality carbon credits, pulling in extra revenues from a very opaque market.
The startup’s offering is for corporates to integrate both carbon removal and avoidance credits in one package. It does this by mining the offsetting market for lots of data points, enabling carbon offset sellers to reach buyers without having to use these middle-men resellers.
The startup claims that sellers no longer waste time and money on bespoke contracts with corporates but instead use Ceezer’s legal framework for all transactions. Simultaneously, buyers can access credits at a primary market level, maximizing the effect of the dollars they spend on carbon offsets.
Ceezer says it now has over 50 corporate customers and has 200,000 tons of carbon credits to sell across a variety of categories. and will use the funds to expand its impact and sourcing team, the idea being to make carbon removal technologies more accessible to corporate buyers, plus widen the product offering for credit sellers and buyers.
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