Apple has filed a lawsuit against NSO Group, the Israeli spyware developer blacklisted by the…
Browsing: cybercrime
According to a disclosure it filed with the Security and Exchanged Commission (SEC) on Monday, web hosting…
The UK’s three spy agencies have contracted Amazon Web Services (AWS), Amazon’s cloud computing arm,…
Global eCommerce platform Amazon has launched an online platform that offers free cybersecurity awareness training…
Twitch has suffered a huge data breach. On Wednesday, an anonymous 4chan user shared a…
Hackers stole cryptocurrencies from at least 6,000 customers of the Nasdaq-listed digital asset exchange Coinbase by exploiting…
REvil, a so-called “ransomware-as-a-service” provider blamed for some of the year’s biggest cyberattacks, has reemerged…
Apple has delayed its plan to implement technology that would scan people’s iPhones and iPads…
The cyber threat landscape continues to pose a serious risk to businesses as cybercriminals increase…
Microsoft is once again advising its customers to disable Windows print spooler, after a new…
According to data revealed by Ransomwhere, hackers behind ransomware attacks have raked in about $33 million…
According to a prominent private cybersecurity firm FireEye which is working with the federal government;…
The Irish supervisory authority for the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is set to launch an…
Only a couple of days ago, Facebook was involved in a massive data breach that…
Facebook this week published a 500-word blog post addressing the data leak of phone numbers from…
A sophisticated attack by the Chinese government-backed hacking group known as Hafnium on Microsoft’s Corp’s…
Statement from four agencies is first from administration to identify Russia as likely culprit in cyberattack
The information that is emerging about Russia’s extensive cyberintelligence operation against the United States and other countries should be increasingly alarming to the public.
While you’ve been distracted by the holidays, coronavirus, and politics, the more we learn about the SolarWinds security fiasco, the worse it looks.
Hackers were able to view some of the code underlying Microsoft software, but weren’t able to make any changes to it.