As droves of pissed off customers attempt to sue the genomics giant, it's disavowing responsibility and turning the blame back on them.
Kaspersky's team was tired of being hacked, then they uncovered backdoors in the hardware of Apple products.
A new SEC rule puts way more pressure on CFOs to come forward immediately.
The agency made thousands of arrests and seized $300 million related to cybercrime as hacks have impacted hundreds of millions of Americans.
1.3 million files from Insomniac Games' and its release slate through 2033 were exposed after Sony missed the deadline to pay hackers $2 million.
Public filings show that a wealth of personal data points were stolen during the breach.
Senator Wyden wants to change privacy policies that allow Apple and Google to share metadata about their users with the government.
For years, Tutanota (which recently rebranded to "Tuta") has been a trusted email provider. A former Canadian cop has accused it of being a honeypot.
The digital privacy experts at Incogni chart an actionable calendar for reclaiming your private information.
If you’re constantly receiving unwanted calls and texts from scammers and solicitors, we have three solutions for you.
Canadian officials’ phones are restricted from using WeChat and TikTok due to the considerable data the apps scrape from user devices.
Cyberattacks in the U.S. rose by 45% this year, compared to the second half of 2022.
Apple has been caught, yet again, hawking a "privacy" feature that does not actually function.
Roundcube released a patch soon after, but the zero-day vulnerability could expose all a user’s emails simply by viewing an innocent looking message.
It’s not exactly a VPN, and it will only work with Google-owned domains to start, but it could offer users more ways to hide their activity online.
The hacker 'Golem' allegedly strikes a second time, this time with more users affected as 23andMe scrambles to address the last breach.
Hackers in Russia and China continue to use an exploit found in older versions of the compression software.
Rumors have been circulating that the encrypted chat app has a bad vulnerability. There's no evidence to support that, execs say.
X's moderation of the unlawful content dropped from 90% to 75% since Elon Musk bought the platform.
Accounts connected to a number of celebrities, including tech luminaries Elon Musk, Sergei Brin, and Mark Zuckerberg, were allegedly compromised as well.