4004 articles
Jeff and Dave sit down with the team over at Threatpost to talk about data, privacy, and the future of the Internet.
CD Projekt confirms attack on internal systems. Hackers claim to have downloaded Cyberpunk 2077 and The Witcher 3 source code, and demand ransom.
Gut-wrenching stories of in-game cheating told by actual participants.
Hackers are actively exploiting a dangerous vulnerability in Google Chrome. With Chrome 88.0.4324.150, Google has patched the vulnerability.
Jeff and Dave discuss some interesting Facebook ads, Nancy Pelosi’s still-missing laptop, Emotet’s takedown, and more.
Scammers are luring Discord users to a fake cryptocurrency exchange with the promise of free Bitcoin or Ethereum.
When the creators of Fonix ransomware abandoned their malicious ways and published the master key, we made a decryptor out of it.
Jeff and Dave talk with Marco Preuss about his recent research on secondhand devices.
Cybercriminals are sending phishing e-mails to hijack access to ESP accounts.
The terms are sometimes confused; we help unravel the differences.
Why the computers in human resources are especially vulnerable, and how to protect them.
Version 14.4 patches vulnerabilities that cybercriminals are actively exploiting. Install this update as soon as possible.
If you receive a message saying your Facebook account has been blocked for copyright violation, don’t panic. It’s most likely just another phishing scam.
Jeff and Dave sit down with Claire Hatcher from Kaspersky’s Fraud Prevention team to discuss the best ways for people to defend themselves from fraud and scams.
Seemingly overnight, the pandemic changed the way we work, and infosec departments are still adjusting. What’s on the horizon for employees in the coming year?
Evade spammers, take control of your notifications, and protect your Discord account from hijacking.
Jeff and Dave chat about Parler’s resurgence, monkey thieves, and Bitcoin scams on Twitter that use verified accounts.
Cybercriminals made off with more than $16 million from ransomware from 2016 to 2017.
Almost half of women working in tech believe the effects of COVID-19 have delayed, rather than enhanced, their career prospects, survey finds.