More Cybersecurity - Page 66
'SNL' and 'It's Always Sunny' writers lend their talents to a new anti-theft Alexa app
Results are not guaranteed. 👀👀
By Jake Krol
Facebook's staunchest privacy advocates are disappearing
Some of Facebook's top privacy defenders have left, and it's not clear who replaces them.
By Karissa Bell
Reddit hack exposes old private messages
Your finely aged private memes are on the loose.
By Jack Morse
Microsoft Edge is killing off passwords with a big new update
Goodbye password123!
Inmates hacked tablets to transfer over $200,000 into accounts
Over 300 inmates gained credits from the hack.
Identify theft protection service LifeLock reportedly exposed customer email addresses
The vulnerability allowed anyone to collect customer email addresses.
By Johnny Lieu
Google announces its first foray into the security key market
And it might just be the thing that makes security keys catch on.
By Jake Krol
Facebook's top security exec urges company to collect less user data
Facebook's top security exec has some advice for the company.
By Karissa Bell
Someone is using a cancelled TV show's verified Twitter account to promote a cryptocurrency scam
The verified Twitter account for the canceled FOX show Almost Human has been hacked. The account is now promoting a cryptocurrency scam.
By Matt Binder
Yeah, this is bad: Russian hackers infiltrate U.S. power grid
The Russian hackers had "hundreds of victims," according to U.S. officials.
Ride-hailing app drivers can livestream your ride — and it's often legal
Until streams cross over into offensive and inappropriate territory they usually stay on the internet without much fanfare.
By Sasha Lekach
Here’s how malicious Android apps are sneaking malware onto your phone
Droppers are sneaking passed Google security checks into the Play store and onto your Android phone.
By Matt Binder
This robotic vacuum's camera could let hackers spy on you
A vacuum that can spy on you and mine cryptocurrency.
By Sasha Lekach
Voters' data was left exposed online because of course it was
A robocalling firm confirms it left a database of voter information online for anyone to access.
By Jack Morse
Apple iCloud data in China now stored by state-owned company
This is definitely not good.
By Matt Binder
Researcher discovers Venmo exposes 'an alarming amount' of personal data in public API
Your name, your comments, the payment date, who is on the other end of the transaction, even your Facebook profile! It's all publicly accessible on Venmo.
By Matt Binder
A hacker tried selling stolen military drone documents for $200
A cybersecurity firm discovered the hacker's flash sale pricing for the documents on the dark web.
By Matt Binder
12 Russians indicted for DNC hack, officially placing foreign blame on 2016 email attack
The Justice Department has officially indicted 12 Russian intelligence officials for the DNC email hack, after conspiracy theories blaming a DNC insider or a lone Romanian hacker spread across the web.
By Matt Binder
Google Chrome's new protection against Meltdown and Spectre bugs will slow your computer down
Better safe than sorry.
By Raymond Wong
Hackers steal $23.5 million from cryptocurrency exchange Bancor
Bancor had one of the biggest ICOs ever, but now they've lost some of that money due to a hack.
YouTube for Android rolls out 'Incognito Mode,' so feel free to watch all the embarrassing content you'd like
Have peace of mind the next time you fall down the YouTube rabbit hole.
By Matt Binder
Hackers steal personal data from up to 21 million Timehop users
Names, phone numbers, and email addresses were stolen.
By Raymond Wong