The casino chain suffered a cyberattack in September that stole social security information from customers who transacted prior to March 2019.
For years, cops have attempted to use data analysis to conduct more efficient investigations. A new study claims that's probably a huge waste of time.
Los Angeles is crawling with automated food delivery robots. Privacy experts are concerned they could soon become an army of narcs.
Reddit removed the ability to turn off ad personalization based on your Reddit activity except for several, unnamed ‘select countries.’
The ALPHV ransomware group allegedly hacked MGM Resorts' computer systems last week with a simple 10-minute phone call.
The CBP told Sen. Ron Wyden it wouldn’t buy commercial location data, except for when there’s a ‘critical mission’ that requires paid-for info
The hotel and casino giant says that it is suffering through a "cybersecurity incident."
Sports arenas across the country are racing to use your face to replace traditional tickets in spite of worries from privacy advocates.
Police say they will deploy drones to monitor large crowds and even large parties in backyards over the Labor Day weekend.
Meta found 7,704 accounts and 954 pages on Facebook and Instagram boosting pro-China content and criticizing US policies.
Unauthorized radio signals were sent to stop Polish trains in their tracks while the Russian national anthem reportedly played in the background.
NightOwl was supposed to make Macs work in dark mode. After a recent update, one developer discovered it was siphoning users’ data through a botnet.
LAPSUS$, a hacker gang that wreaked havoc last year, was helmed by a number of literal children, a British court has found.
The EU gave social media platforms until August 25 to comply with the Digital Services Act resulting in Meta taking new "transparency measures."
This week in weird-ass cyberattacks: an exploit that can pilfer your data just by listening to the sound of your keystrokes.
Cybersecurity attacks have ramped up in recent years, with 110.8 million accounts leaked in the second quarter of 2023.
At a time when threats to digital privacy are at an all-time high, one of the web's most formidable hacktivist groups may offer a solution with "Veilid."
The bureau was ordered to find out which government agency broke with White House policy and engaged a blacklisted spyware vendor. It found...itself.
Does surveillance tech help cops catch criminals? Not in NOLA, a new report from the city shows.
Have you texted someone lately to express guilt over...something? The government probably wants to know about it.