The daily life of a white-hat hacker
For the pilot of our “The daily life of…” series, we filmed David Jacoby — at home and out about town
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For the pilot of our “The daily life of…” series, we filmed David Jacoby — at home and out about town
In the second part of our “Ask the expert” session, Jornt van der Wiel answers questions about encryption: how it works, what it is for, and more.
You could’ve asked our GReAT members whatever you wanted. Here are the best 6 questions and GReAT experts’ answers
Kaspersky Lab, the Dutch National Police, Europol, and Intel Security are joining forces to launch a new initiative to battle ransomware worldwide. The initiative is called “No More Ransom.”
On July 27, members of Kaspersky Lab’s GReAT will sit down on Reddit, where you can ask them absolutely anything.
On July 27, members of Kaspersky Lab’s GReAT will sit down on Reddit, where you can ask them absolutely anything.
Kaspersky Lab’s GReAT expert Ryan Naraine offers tips to avoid falling victim to ransomware.
Ryan Naraine and Juan Andrés Guerrero-Saade discuss the threat landscape and what is being done to prevent major attacks.
Aleks Gostev of Kaspersky Lab’s GReAT discusses the WhatApp move towards encryption and how email needs to be next in adopting end-to-end encryption
What happens when real cyber experts head to TV to stop cybercrime?
At the 2016 RSA conference, Kurt Baumgartner spoke on why we need to put some emphasis on security for the transportation industry.
At SAS 2016 Sergey Lozhkin revealed how he hacked his friend’s hospital and medical equipment.
Vitaly Kamluk of the Kaspersky GReAT discusses Adwind during the SAS 2016.
At The SAS 2016, Kaspersky Lab researchers discussed the newly discovered Poseidon Group. A custom APT boutique chasing commercially valuable data
At SAS 2016 our GReAT experts talk about a Java-based multi platform malware used by hundreds of cybercriminals for a handful of purposes
Fraudsters portfolio updated: now they’ve learnt to steal money from banks directly. How did it happen?
In their predictions for 2016, the GReAT team said that APTs will be replaced by deeper, embedded attacks that are harder to detect and trace back to the perpetrators.
Since you started to connect all those Things to the Internet, creating IoT, your home is no longer your fortress by design. Now attackers can spy on your kid through a baby monitor or break into your house by fooling your ‘smart’ security lock.
Kaspersky Lab joined hands with the Dutch police to arrest the criminals behind the CoinVault dangerous ransomware.