There's a slew of ad tracking tech on the New York Times-owned Wordle, a game once lauded for having none at all.
If nothing else, the Ukraine crisis has shown how confused we all are about what's real and what's propaganda.
Authorities say that a multi-year hacking campaign has resulted in sensitive IT information being stolen.
Considering how the software's been used to target countless civic actors across the EU, the idea sounds pretty reasonable.
Reports show that websites for the embattled nation's defense and financial entities were struck by debilitating attacks on Tuesday.
The San Francisco District Attorney called the practice "legally and ethically wrong."
Nearly half of the total funding is linked to U.S. accounts, the unverified data says.
A recent study shows the tactics and techniques of a cybercrime group that is known for planting incriminating evidence on the devices of activists in India.
A classified report viewed by U.S. Senators shows that the CIA has a previously unknown "bulk collection" surveillance program that involves Americans' data.
A teenager in Russia has been put behind bars for plotting to blowup the nation's domestic security agency...in a video game.
The four Democrats sent letters to the Departments of Justice, Defense, Homeland Security, and the Interior urging them to cease using Clearview AI.
The right-wing Twitter alternative is apparently having big financial problems. The solution? Layoff its entire IT staff.
The EU's landmark privacy law, GDPR, was supposed to change the world of tech privacy forever. What the hell happened?
After ongoing scandals involving shady malware vendor NSO Group, it turns out that a rival firm has also been targeting iPhones with its own exploits.
Another crypto hack is at hand and, once again, hundreds of millions of dollars have been disappeared in a cloud of virtual smoke.
A new report claims that an "independent hacker" took down North Korea's internet because he was mad that the country's government had targeted him.
A whistleblower alleges that the scandal-ridden NSO Group once offered "bags of cash" to his company to buy access to U.S. mobile networks.
SXM Media is one of the players scrambling to come up with something to replace the long-hated cookie.
A research team has discovered that a GPU can be fingerprinted, thus transforming it into a web tracker that can monitor computer users.
U.S. agencies considered buying "Phantom," a previously unknown spyware system from NSO Group, even after ongoing allegations of misconduct emerged.