Chick-fil-A violated one of the US' only federal privacy laws by sharing video viewership data with Facebook, according to a new lawsuit.
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 trendy new chatbot has many skills, and one of them is writing "polymorphic" malware that will destroy your computer.
The massive hack is the second in less than two years at the telecom company.
Abortion pill websites are selling consumer data to outside third parties, according to new reports.
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.
The onion router is supposed to keep your web activity hidden from prying eyes. So how did the feds trace a Tor user to his grandmother's house?
The supposedly private messenger, used by Germany's chancellor and the Swiss army, discovered some serious problems with its encryption protocols.
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.
The report also stated that the department did not enable multi-factor authentication on 89% of its high-value assets.
Digitize anything and someone will hack it. The latest victim of this universal rule is California's new, hi-tech license plates.
A first of its kind $45 million bond could spell better stability for the cyber insurance industry, which hasn't always looked so healthy in recent years.
An ongoing data disaster at Twitter just got a whole lot worse.
WhatsApp has created a proxy server to allow users in countries with strict censorship or internet blocks to access the app.
Quantum computing, Signal, and Elon Musk will define the security of our data in 2023.
HB 142 officially went into effect January 1, mandating that websites with more than one-third pornographic content verify user age via official ID.
The company advised certain users to consider changing their passwords for websites they have stored with the service.
A wave of new Google popups is spreading across the web, but a new feature from DuckDuckGo blocks them automatically.
Some users reportedly found that hackers drained their accounts last month, though the company claimed that there was ‘no evidence’ its systems were breached.