The Russian-speaking hacker group Killnet is believed to be behind the unsettling incident. Federal officials said the incident was not severe.
The dark web marketplace wrote over the weekend they were giving away 1.2 million credit card details, mostly from American Express users and those in the U.S.
Privacy advocates are raising alarms over another rapidly propagating police surveillance tool.
Meta’s security team also revealed that the company had uncovered some 400 different mobile apps devoted to stealing Facebook user login information.
A Greek financial journalist is one of several who believe they have been targeted for surveillance by the nation's government with the help of Intellexa.
The firm's former chief information security officer was found guilty of hiding a massive data breach from federal investigators.
Two dozen civil rights groups urged Congress to pass transparency rules around military purchases of private data.
Amazon keeps trying to put a cute face on its surveillance tech.
Users shared screenshots of Apple News alerts containing the N-word and other obscenities.
Amid widespread protests in the country, encrypted communication seems like an unmitigated win.
By publishing server-side source code, the hacker who breached Rockstar's systems could open up one of the world's most popular games to tons of cheating.
LAUSD, which encompasses over 1,000 schools and some 600,000 students, was hacked on Sept. 6.
Customers were notified of the hack on Friday, more than two months after the fact. The company claims there's no evidence of information misuse.
The company also cleared up how the hacker was able to get around multi-factor authentication.
Using an exploit in the AI language model, users have used a Twitter AI to post ASCII art and make ‘credible threats’ against the president.
Somebody wormed their way into the tech giant's systems, though it's hard to say how bad the damage is yet.
Rep. Anna Eshoo says the tool, Fog Reveal, "presents a new threat" in the post-Roe landscape.
The hacker claimed to gain access to Uber's AWS, Google Cloud, and even financial data.
We’ve known about manipulative user interfaces for a long while now, but the FTC reported that more and more companies are tricking site visitors.
The agency permits thousands of its employees to search database of Americans' cell phone info “for any reason,” Sen. Ron Wyden said in a letter.