Why is a Russian company that supplied code to thousands of apps on both Google Play and the Apple App Store pretending to be American?
While the government had previously claimed it had no interest in using spyware to investigate criminals, new reporting from the NYT suggests otherwise.
In a disgusting move, cybercriminals published the personal medical details of individual patients to the internet this week.
After commercially available spyware was used to spy on droves of Greek politicians and journalists, the government is implementing a blanket prohibition.
Drones are creepy enough already, but researchers at the University of Waterloo recently fixed one up with a scanning device that is the definition of invasive.
A new Homeland Security report details orders to connect protesters arrested in Portland to one another in service of the Trump's imaginary antifa plot.
A report shows four Bluetooth-centered apps by the same developer have been downloaded 1 million times combined while containing malicious code.
Remote work has accelerated when and where “the office” happens. Is your company’s security stack keeping pace?
The newspaper's Twitter account came alive with links to shocking fake stories on Thursday morning.
For years, the site offered a variety of dubious services, including the sale of "zero day" exploits that could hack major corporations.
An app owned by Uber that funnels booze into your eager and waiting hands is getting its butt kicked by the FTC over serious security blunders.
Interpol announced users can take ‘immersive’ VR training courses while seeming to imply there will only be more crime coming to the metaverse.
It's no secret we live in an expanding surveillance state, but here are some the places where government supervision is at its worst.
The FBI, Federal Trade Commission, and President Biden have all said to look out for phishing attempts as people apply for the debt forgiveness program.
The hackers claim to have 200 gigabytes of data stolen from Medibank health insurance company.
The private search company is bringing its data protection to your Mac.
Parents in Uvalde, where 19 kids and two teachers were killed, were asked to provide DNA so their children could be identified.
A WSJ journalist was discussing a business deal with a source. Did a major American law firm hire cyber mercenaries to take him down?
The Do Not Track Kids app will help you fight back against tech companies who harvest kids' data.
A new report details ways advertisers are taking lessons learned from mobile ads to create intimately targeted ads in the physical world.