With our embrace of smart technology, we have collectively traded safety for comfort, making ourselves vulnerable to hackers.
A pair of US lawmakers are calling for an investigation into how easily spies can steal information based on devices’ electromagnetic and acoustic leaks—a spying trick the NSA once codenamed TEMPEST.
Vulnerabilities in Anthropic’s Claude Code tool could have allowed attackers to silently gain control of a developer’s ...
A man in a black hoodie wearing a Guy Fawkes mask sits in a dark room, face lit up forebodingly by his laptop screen. He types furiously, laying down dozens of lines of code. After a few moments go by ...
The former boss of the L3Harris-owned hacking and surveillance tools maker Trenchant faces nine years in prison for selling ...
Researchers at FIU’s College of Engineering and Computing have developed an encryption algorithm to defend videos from attackers with access to the world's most powerful computers. The encryption ...
Security researchers say exploits used by governments to hack into Apple iPhones have been found used by cybercriminals. They ...
New York’s new mayor, Zohran Mamdani, managed to turn a routine security notice into a global tech argument when his team added Raspberry Pi computers to the banned items list for his NYC swearing-in.
Spot signs of hacking early: Detect if computer compromised with key indicators, tools, and cybersecurity tips to secure your system fast. Pixabay, pixelcreatures Rising cyber threats make early ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Hackers are a busy bunch, with more than 300 million computers hacked every year — and there's a dizzying range of ways in which a ...
TSA warns against using public airport USB charging stations due to the risk of "juice jacking," where hackers can steal your data. Travelers should use a personal power brick or battery pack instead ...