37 articles
Hundreds of thousands of tokens and cryptographic keys have been discovered on GitHub. We explain why this is bad and how to avoid a leak.
A huge database of leaked e-mails and passwords surfaced in the Internet. Here’s what you should do about it.
In this special edition of the Kaspersky Lab podcast, we discuss how parents should look at raising digital natives and the precautions they need to take.
The personal data of 257,000 Facebook users, including private messages belonging to 81,000 of them, has leaked online. Hackers claim to have access to 120 million accounts.
In this edition, Jeff and Dave discuss a Facebook privacy loophole, Walmart patenting listening software, e-mail being too hard, and oh yeah, some data breaches.
In this edition, Jeff and Dave discuss third parties reading your Gmail, Samsung’s SMS app leaking photos, NYC pranksters, and more.
How Twitter’s “not-a-leak” made me realize that remembering passwords no longer works.
Jeff and Dave discuss the latest changes at Facebook, a data breach at Panera Bread, the fallout from the ransomware in Atlanta, and more.
Transatlantic Cable Podcast episode 2: autonomous pizza delivery, Sarahah’s privacy issues, reprieve for victims of Yahoo!’s data breach and more.
Considering the sweeping regulations and laws meant to safeguard children’s privacy in particular, you might think electronic devices and connected toys for kids would be particularly safe and secure. We
Earlier this week, my colleague Chris from Threatpost penned an article about how Dropbox forced a password reset for users who had not changed their passwords since 2012. At the
Like the invention of the fire pit, the history of the first password is lost to the depths of time. We know that Romans used them. Shakespeare mentioned passwords in
Today is special corporate edition of our weekly news digest, which we will devote to ROI, EBITDA, TCO, IFRS, CRM, SLA, NDA, GAAP and the likes. Just kidding – as
The Ashley Madison scandal reached its peak when hackers published private users data on the darknet. Allegedly two suicides followed the incident and the sticky situation turned out to be
Ashley Madison’s unplanned affairwith a group of hackers did not succeed. On August 18, 2015 the hackers posted nearly 10-gigabytes of stolen data online. Now anyone can download the records