Transatlantic Cable podcast, episode 227
Squid Games crypto scams, DarkSide ransom, and Facebook decides to shutter its facial recognition system.
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Squid Games crypto scams, DarkSide ransom, and Facebook decides to shutter its facial recognition system.
We look at some examples of LinkedIn phishing and explain how everyone can avoid taking the bait.
A conversation with Allison Pytlak of Reaching Critical Will to discuss why we need more gender equity in cybersecuirty.
We based our new threat intelligence management platform on Kaspersky CyberTrace.
In the wake of recent research, we talk about several scenarios that underlie malicious activity on Discord.
This week on the Kaspersky podcast, Ahmed, David, and Jeff discuss the latest with REvil, Apple costing SM companies $10 billion, and more.
What do James Bond and his Secret Intelligence Service colleagues know about cybersecurity?
Some forged Green Pass certificates on sale on the Internet pass validation tests. However, it’s still not a good idea to buy them, and here’s why.
This week on the Kaspersky podcast, Ahmed, Jag, and Jeff discuss the FBI hacking REvil, AI mistaking a woman for a car, Squid Game, and more.
We’re acquiring an SD-WAN provider to upgrade our enterprise portfolio with SASE and reinforce XDR.
Npm package UAParser.js, installed on tens of millions of computers worldwide, has been infected with a password stealer and a miner. Here’s what to do.
If you receive an e-mail of dubious authenticity, analyze it yourself. Here’s how.
A recent study shows that even “clean” Android smartphones collect a lot of information about their owners.
This week on the Kaspersky podcast, Ahmed, Dave, and Jeff discuss a school using facial recognition for kids’ lunch payments, REvil being hacked again, more than $600 million in ransom payments, and more.
Free yourself from social media and start living again.
Over the past five years, the Trickbot banking Trojan has evolved into a multifunctional tool for cybercriminals.
Kaspersky’s Ask the Analyst service will ease access to our expertise.
Just like many other modern devices, seemingly “dumb” feature phones are much smarter than you might think. And this may be a problem.
On October’s Patch Tuesday, Microsoft patched 71 vulnerabilities, several of which are particularly serious.