A new privacy feature from Mozilla strips URLs of parameters that follows a user's clicks on links that target you with more ads.
For years, critics have claimed that the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act is too broad and indiscriminate.
The hack was reportedly connected to the infamous LAPSUS$ group, but it’s not clear yet what—and how much—data was taken.
Viewers were faced with this message: "On your hands is the blood of thousands of Ukrainians and their hundreds of murdered children."
Attackers reportedly conducted 237 operation with some seemingly occurring in tandem with kinetic military strikes.
Cybersecurity experts from 30 NATO members are cooperating to stave off an attack on the fictional island country of “Berylia.”
Cyberattacks, disinformation, and state-sponsored actors, oh my.
London police say the hackers are between the ages of 16 and 21.
LAPSUS$ recently published source code for Microsoft's Cortana and Bing.
The Russian Ministry says it's facing an "unprecedented" assault by foreign hackers.
A threat actor with longstanding ties to the Chinese government has targeted half a dozen state governments, research from cybersecurity giant Mandiant shows.
NBC has reported that the White House is mulling "massive" cyberattacks on Russia as a result of the Ukraine invasion. Officials have denied it.
Authorities say that a multi-year hacking campaign has resulted in sensitive IT information being stolen.
The Cole County prosecuting attorney said that the issue had already been resolved through non-legal means.
A new report claims that an "independent hacker" took down North Korea's internet because he was mad that the country's government had targeted him.
Reports of a hacktivist attack on the railway system in Belarus still have not been confirmed, but that doesn't make them any less fascinating.
A vulnerability in a widely used Apache library has caused Internet-wide chaos—and the trouble may just be starting.
The Windows Installer vulnerability is in its early stages, but security researchers warn of a wider campaign.
Russian cyber-spies used a special technique to hide behind Americans' home and mobile networks while on intelligence missions, a recent report says.
A new report shows that a particular hacker group, believed to be based in China, has been targeting telecommunication firms throughout the globe.