These are the worst hacks, cyberattacks, and data breaches of 2019
A slew of hacks, data breaches, and attacks tainted the cybersecurity landscape in 2019.
A slew of hacks, data breaches, and attacks tainted the cybersecurity landscape in 2019.
Facebook suspends accounts linked to APT32, says the group used its platform to spread malware.
Medical records removed from leaky server after more than three weeks.
No one really knows whether adware, those ads that magically appear when you click on a site, give products positive brand recognition or annoy you so much you'll never buy.
If these numbers were reported in a corporate situation, they would be considered an absolute triumph of big data management and implementation. UPDATE: Response/corrections/clarifications from Washington Post reporter.
Now the soon-to-be public business is taking initiative by launching its own security coalition, dubbed Box Trust.
NSA spooks gather for a colleague's retirement party at a bar. What they don't know is that an RFID scanner is picking them out - and a wireless Bluetooth webcam is taking their picture.
Some security firms promise too much, said the head of information security at Toyota, as he cautioned against buying into the security "panacea".
Chinese ride-sharing app has been ordered off appstores after it was put under a cybersecurity review, just days after it made its debut on the New York Stock Exchange.
Carr's right, your company's MCSEs aren't any smarterthan the other guy's, the hardware both of you buy, whether you think it's from Dell, IBM, or even HP is reallymade by the same people in the same factory using the same parts, and the software supplier is, of course, a monopoly.