After a major Norwegian newspaper publisher, Amedia, suffered a breach Tuesday night, the company was forced to stop printing.
Two-factor authentication is a widely used and trusted security mechanism, but criminals are increasingly using malicious toolkits that can outwit it.
The password manager was accused of a data breach but the company says that's not what happened.
Did the crypto community get burned this year? Of course, it did.
Frightening exploits sold by the embattled Israeli spyware vendor have been used to hack people all over the world. Now researchers have unpacked how it works.
Garrett metal detectors, which are used in schools and government buildings, have security vulnerabilities that can be remotely exploited.
The spyware giant has denied that it played a role in the Saudi dissident's death.
Security professionals recently discovered additional log4j vulnerabilities. They're already causing trouble.
Vladislav Klyushin is accused in a hacking scheme said to have netted tens of millions.
Some DHS components failed to show they were following protocol.
Despite what you may have heard, NASA firmly denies it's using the bug-ridden log4j.
The FBI once acknowledged the existence of surveillance NDAs. Now it won't.
A vulnerability in a widely used Apache library has caused Internet-wide chaos—and the trouble may just be starting.
For the record, the FCC does not actually have jurisdiction over end-to-end encryption.
Bitcoin's blockchain appears to be the newest tool that cybercriminals are using to make their botnets incredibly resilient.
While Microsoft Teams drew headlines for preventing emergency calls over the weekend, that bug could impact countless other apps.
A zero-day has sent security professionals into chaos. Minecraft players are on the front lines and should patch immediately.
One of the nation's biggest cream cheese manufacturers had a production shortfall due to a ransomware attack in October.
Consumer Reports recently reviewed a variety of virtual private networks, finding that most of them don't keep their promises.
CIA chief William Burns told a conference the agency has "a number of different projects," mentioning anti-ransomware efforts.
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