Three Iranian men allegedly carried out attacks on everything from electrical utilities to a domestic violence shelter to a county government.
The Chinese government claims the infiltration of a top college is the latest in an ongoing barrage of cyberattacks conducted by America's hackers.
The cleaner allegedly offered to send photos of the residence and plug-in a dirty USB device in exchange for around $7,000.
The short video app, known for sucking up a radical amount of your data, wants you to know that it didn't let hackers steal any of it.
Federal law enforcement pointed to the growing number of hacks and exploits used to steal billions in crypto from ‘decentralized’ platforms.
A phishing campaign targeted Okta users at multiple companies, successfully swiping passwords from staffers and then using them to steal company secrets.
The suit accused Block of failing to properly prevent a former employee from gaining access to millions of Cash App investing customers' data.
Some users may have noticed a new little badge appear on their profile.
A cyber-attack hit South Staffordshire Water, which supplies 1.3 million people. But hackers claimed they had breached the much larger Thames Water.
The encrypted messaging platform announced a small proportion of users could have had their phone numbers and SMS registration codes accessed by an attacker.
The Kremlin’s cyber-goons are sending mass texts to Ukrainian civilians threatening their lives if they don’t retreat from their homes.
A cybersecurity professional presented research at Black Hat about how his algorithm was co-opted by at least three separate companies.
The House Intelligence Committee held a hearing on Wednesday to discuss the dangers posed by commercial surveillance, particularly the NSO Group.
Don't panic: We'll tell you how to minimize the damage.
A dating app for the unvaccinated, Unjected, left user data totally unprotected, according to new research.
A Chinese GPS tracker with nearly half a million customers has security flaws that could let a hacker cut fuel to a car while it's running, researchers say.
Hacks, breaches, and bugs. There's plenty of that kind of thing going around lately.
A state website launched Monday for gun owners was supposed to “increase transparency and information sharing.” It certainly did!
The graphics cards company says it's looking into claims made by a relatively new cybercriminal group. Did its employees really use "123456" for their accounts?
Extortion group RansomHouse is claiming to be behind the attack.