Newly unearthed papers show federal agencies testing facial recognition tools in subway cameras, street corners, and other public spaces.
In what could be the beginning of a huge mess, hackers managed to steal a significant amount of "sensitive" data from the law enforcement agency.
TikTok was reportedly blindsided by the EU's decision to ban the app for government staff.
The game publisher behind Call of Duty and other favorites has publicly admitted to a breach of its systems, but it reportedly kept mum with workers.
Cybercriminals stole personal information on millions of DNA Diagnostics Center clients, all stored on a database the company was unaware of.
The Disruptive Technology Strike Force could stop some tech theft but risks escalating already fraught tensions with China, experts say.
Cybercriminals have derailed municipal operations for one of the Bay Area's most populous cities.
Australian officials cited concerns over spying. China said it always encouraged companies to follow local laws when carrying out business abroad.
The social media site says that a phishing incident led to the theft of company data but that user data is safe.
The State Department spokesperson said the balloon was capable of collecting communications and data via a satellite and had “multiple antennas.”
LockBit reportedly attacked Royal Mail data systems last month and has now set a deadline to release the data this week if Royal Mail does not pay the ransom.
Ransomware gangs aren’t typically known for being nice people, but Hive really takes things to another level. The gang targeted hospitals across the globe.
The feds have found a new way to dismantle cybercrime organizations like the Hive gang: embed, monitor, then disrupt.
The database reportedly held more than 1.5 million entities which included the names and birthdates of people with suspected ties to terrorist organizations.
The massive hack is the second in less than two years at the telecom company.
More than 150 million money transfer records are reportedly accessible, without a warrant, by more than 600 law enforcement agencies.
Although malware attacks aren't necessarily declining, cybercriminals' profits are, new analysis says.
Scammers and sanctioned entities accounted for most illicit crypto this past year, though the analysis does not account for major exchanges that went bust.
A flaw in the app's API reportedly let anyone with a specific URL view data on officers, suspects, and the operations they were engaged in.
The U.K.-based news outlet was hacked in December in a cyber-attack that compromised its tech infrastructure. Its offices have been shuttered since.