The Cocoapods vulnerabilities could threaten TikTok, Snapchat, LinkedIn, Netflix, Microsoft Teams, Facebook Messenger, and many others.
AU10TIX promised to keep user data safe but the company appears to have badly bungled its own security.
A rash of software vulnerabilities could spell big trouble for Pixel owners if left unpatched.
A private security firm that controls a huge amount of money was robbed over Easter weekend. Cops are stumped as to how it happened.
The Department of Homeland Security says email accounts of U.S. officials were exposed due to Microsoft's security failures.
AT&T has automatically reset the passcodes of 7.6 million current customers. It will be offering complimentary identity theft and credit monitoring.
Canadian officials have linked the Flipper Zero to a spate of car thefts and plan to ban the device. The tool's developers say the concerns are unfounded.
A new classified program has raised some eyebrows with its bizarre choice in codename.
Researchers uncovered a dead simple social engineering attack that could let criminals drive away with your car.
The tiny hacking device has been viewed as a threat by law enforcement. Now it looks like a major western government is trying to ban it.
Turns out that the SEC's X account was hacked, partially because it neglected a very basic rule of online security.
Kaspersky's team was tired of being hacked, then they uncovered backdoors in the hardware of Apple products.
A new SEC rule puts way more pressure on CFOs to come forward immediately.
The agency made thousands of arrests and seized $300 million related to cybercrime as hacks have impacted hundreds of millions of Americans.
Public filings show that a wealth of personal data points were stolen during the breach.
The consumer DNA harvesting king exposed 6.9 million people’s data. We’ll never know exactly what goes wrong from here.
Okta previously said 1% of its users were hit by a data breach. It turns out it’s more like every client in Okta’s customer support system.
This holiday season, make sure you're only getting ripped off by corporate America, not cybercriminals.
Cyberattacks in the U.S. rose by 45% this year, compared to the second half of 2022.
Roundcube released a patch soon after, but the zero-day vulnerability could expose all a user’s emails simply by viewing an innocent looking message.
Mode
Follow us