“Puss in Boots” APT campaign
Charles Perrault explains how hired hackers use social engineering and watering hole attacks for political purposes.
1278 articles
Charles Perrault explains how hired hackers use social engineering and watering hole attacks for political purposes.
Scammers prod employees to take performance appraisals but in reality siphon off their work account passwords.
Contrary to common belief, public clouds are not highly secure by design, and so require additional protection.
Social engineering augmented with machine-learning algorithms can deceive even high-ranking executives.
We surveyed almost 5,000 business decision-makers willing to share their thoughts on cybersecurity and their firms’ attitudes about cyberthreats.
What cyberimmunity means in practice and in the industrial infrastructure environment.
What happens if you store all data in a single cloud storage and the backup service gets attacked by ransomware?
Toyota’s European division just lost more than $37 million to cybercriminals. Learn how to avoid becoming a victim of a BEC attack.
In case of a cybersecurity incident, whom should you communicate with inside the company? Which channels should you use — and which ones should you avoid? And how should you react?
Small businesses may not be the main target of cybercriminals, but it does not mean an SMB will not fall victim to a supply-chain attack. How not to become collateral damage.
Cheats for multiplayer games are tantamount to malware, and their use in competitions to cybercrime.
Chrome and Firefox extensions can collect your browsing history. Learn why this is dangerous and how to protect yourself.
Some employees handle lots of external e-mails, running the risk of getting hit by malicious spam. We explain how to protect company systems from possible infection.
Eugene Kaspersky explains how Kaspersky Sandbox uses virtual machines to thoroughly examine malware’s behavior.
Collaboration tools can become a vector for malware propagation.
We explain what an SOC 2 audit is, why we passed it, and how it was performed.
Fraudsters are using the feedback forms on the websites of reputable companies to send spam.
To build a safer future, we need to stop fearing and start immunizing.