
KRACK: Your Wi-Fi is no longer secure
Every Wi-Fi network using WPA or WPA2 encryption is vulnerable to a key reinstallation attack. Here are some more details and means of protection.
3956 articles
Every Wi-Fi network using WPA or WPA2 encryption is vulnerable to a key reinstallation attack. Here are some more details and means of protection.
What Russian hackers, American spies, the Israeli Intelligence Service, and Kaspersky Lab have to do with each other. What is happening, anyway?
In this week’s edition of the Transatlantic Cable podcast, we discuss Equifax, PornHub, pulled AI and more.
Our research shows most users of online dating sites fudge information about themselves. Why they do it and what you can do about it.
One of the most popular porn sites in the world was serving malware through ads to millions of its users.
The real scale of the Yahoo breach (spoiler: 3 billion), Facebook’s own Face ID, UK Lottery DDoS, and more.
What if you could pay with your personal data for goods – as if it was some sort of currency? Sounds attractive… or scary?
Let’s celebrate by sharing some advice with those who need it. Here are five tips you can use to help your friends and relatives stay safe online.
The largest motor show in the world is the best place to see what cars will look like in the near future.
Let’s talk about solving blockchain’s six main problems to help it work better, faster, and more efficiently.
Transatlantic Cable Podcast episode 4: tax scams, trading data for swag, AI password cracking, and more.
A new blocker called nRansom locks users out of their computers and demands not money, but nude pictures.
A few more tips about gaming accounts safety, or How to protect your Steam, Uplay, Origin, battle.net and so on.
Several months ago, our experts found a bunch of vulnerabilities in Android apps that allow users to control their cars remotely. What has changed since then?
Cybersecurity is ever-changing how can executives stay ahead of the curve?
How facial recognition works in the new Apple iPhone X —and is it secure enough for you to usetrust?
Android users have the largest selection of mobile apps, but that means they are also exposed to the most threats. Avoid mobile malware by following some basic security rules.