
What do you need to do about the recent Facebook security breach?
Facebook has been breached, and malefactors gained access to some 50 million accounts. We offer some quick tips for your safety.
1408 articles
Facebook has been breached, and malefactors gained access to some 50 million accounts. We offer some quick tips for your safety.
In this edition of the Kaspersky Lab podcast, we discuss predators heading to Fortnite, Firefox telling you if you have been hacked, and more.
In this edition of the Kaspersky Lab podcast, a pair of animals making tech news, adult gaming on Steam, and Amazon deleting reviews.
This edition of the Kaspersky Lab podcast looks at the latest — a British Airways hack and Facebook’s litigation.
This edition of the Kaspersky Lab podcast looks at Google and Mastercard sharing data, a hacked Chrome extension, and some thoughts from Captain Kirk.
Which is older, the phone or the fax? Is it true that no one faxes anymore? And can a fax machine be hacked? (Spoiler: yes)
Fortnite for Android is not available on Google Play. We explain how to download and install it properly, and what else to do to stay safe.
David and Jeff discuss Fortnite (again!), the T-Mobile data breach, and how a fish tank helped, in a way, with the development of the modern Internet.
WhatsApp for Android can back up your chats to Google Drive. It’s free, but it may hurt older backups. Here’s how to get it right.
How a seemingly harmless Android application can infect your smartphone using shared external storage.
This week’s episode of the Kaspersky Podcast looks at Google tracking (and possible lawsuits as a result), Gatwick screen fails and Trello board fails.
Are the IoT’s security issues placing the industry on the road to a litigation nightmare?
Almost half of the most-visited websites open visitors to potential dangers. What can you do?
When it comes to online accounts, voicemail is a major security hole. Here’s why.
The 50th edition of the Kaspersky Lab podcast looks into the latest in Google tracking, spam, and hacking ATMs and police body cameras.
KeyPass ransomware is infecting computers worldwide, encrypting almost everything in its path. And it all starts with downloading a seemingly innocuous installer.
How security researchers were able to track down cryptocurrency bots on Twitter.
In this edition of the podcast, Jeff and Dave discuss the Black Hat USA conference, a downside of Fortnite coming to Android, the Reddit hack, and our latest report on the state of malware.
In this edition of the podcast, Jeff and Dave discuss a McDonald’s Monopoly whopper, banning miners, hacking by inmates, and more.
As Kaspersky Lab’s legal challenge continues, Eugene Kaspersky considers why cybersecurity companies must fight for the industry to stay open and collaborative