Apple just pushed out updates that fix a vulnerability that was seeing exploitation by hackers.
While some companies behind the codes confirm that they aren't selling the data they collect, there's nothing stopping them from sharing it.
The company, which was hit by one of the worst ransomware attacks ever, has found a solution for its global problem but won't say where it came from.
When elected officials use HIPAA as an excuse, it makes the already confusing law even harder to understand.
A large domain name system failure appears to have knocked major websites offline.
The phone number of Pavel Durov, CEO and co-founder of Telegram, was found in the phone records cache that may represent potential spying targets.
The latest scandal to rock the Catholic Church was both incredibly unnerving and entirely preventable. Why isn't anyone doing anything about it?
New research shows a cheap, creepy malware circulating the dark web that has the power to log your keystrokes and steal your data—all for a low, low price.
The phone numbers of world leaders were discovered in a gargantuan cache of 50,000 phone records, which are considered potential targets of spying.
Now you can check whether your phone's been hacked using the notorious firm's "Pegasus" malware.
The cybercriminals are now attempting to sell the data for millions on the dark web.
The Israeli company has been accused of helping repressive governments hack journalists and dissidents all over the world.
The accused apparently planned to target sites with explosives.
Questions have been raised about a Texas Republican's well-timed MSFT trade.
Nobody can blame GOP voters for wanting a phone that prioritizes privacy and autonomy, but the Freedom Phone can't be trusted.
Phones assign individual users IDs so that advertisers can better sell to them. The IDs are anonymous but, as usual, the data industry has found a loophole.
The firm, whose data extraction tools are a police favorite, is facing intense scrutiny for the ways in which its products are abused by governments.
The Russian-speaking cybercriminal group REvil has gone dark. Its websites were taken offline early Tuesday morning, and nobody is sure why.
Jen Easterly, a former NSA official, is the new director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.
U.S. authorities attempted to hobble an infamous cybercriminal group last year but it looks like the gang is back in action.
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