Are your secrets safe on your messenger apps?
Popular online messengers cannot be considered secure enough, yet people continue to use them to exchange private and critical information.
3227 articles
Popular online messengers cannot be considered secure enough, yet people continue to use them to exchange private and critical information.
Online privacy is an issue that worries a lot of people. Here are ten basic tips on how to protect your personal data online.
Kaspersky Lab’s Protected browser helps you make online transactions securely. It uses orange frame colors to tell users if something is wrong.
What does Google know about you and me? Let’s check it with the new “About me” tool.
Chris Doggett offers some thoughts on security without borders.
Do ATMs employ a secret trick to call the police, and should you trust anything written in CAPS?
Sometimes even cybercriminals go fishing. They hunt for a special goldfish — our personal data. So, what can you do to protect yourself from phishing?
The Internet is full of thoughts and perceptions, both true and false. Let’s investigate whether the Internet legend about hotel key cards storing guests’ personal information is fact or fiction.
Why you shouldn’t bring your smartphone to the bathroom
It’s believed, that we own GPS, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi and CDMA invention to Hedy Lamarr. Let’s find out if this is true and what exactly the actress contributed to the development of these technologies.
Think a photo of your boarding pass is innocent when posted online? Think again.
Since you started to connect all those Things to the Internet, creating IoT, your home is no longer your fortress by design. Now attackers can spy on your kid through a baby monitor or break into your house by fooling your ‘smart’ security lock.
Criminals can use VoLTE to cause connection failure, subdue voice calls, or strip the victim’s mobile account of money.
The Internet can be a mess unless you have the right map. Here are 7 great maps for you to bookmark.
Nearly every person has ever faced a cyber criminal’s activity; many have become victims of banking frauds. So, how does it happen?
While FBI recommends victims to pay the ransom, Kaspersky Lab won back the access to the files for dozens of thousands of CoinVault and Bitcryptor victims.
Fingerprints and iris scans are insecure and can be stolen to compromise your identity.
Do you think that you have nothing to hack whatsoever? Bad news, guys: everyone has something hackable!
The Mets and Royals aren’t the only ones looking to cash in during the World Series.
Stop what you are doing and check your privacy settings on Facebook.