Why buying a “smart” padlock is a bad idea
It seems the only reason to buy a “smart” padlock is to make lock-pickers happy.
3313 articles
It seems the only reason to buy a “smart” padlock is to make lock-pickers happy.
Has your sat nav ever insisted you are somewhere you are clearly not? Welcome to GPS spoofing.
Cybercriminals take control of corporate mail accounts to send filter-dodging spam.
Dave and Jeff take a look at the latest in the IC3 report, digital clutter, USB devices gone rogue, and more.
Tempted to find the movie Avengers: Endgame online? Be cautious: A lot of websites promise to deliver but collect your passwords and credit card details instead.
Major areas of risk for initial coin offerings that you can and should address before selling a single token.
Cybercriminals are hijacking routers to steal people’s credentials for online banking and services.
In this episode of the Kaspersky Lab podcast, Dave and Jeff take a look at the latest Facebook snafu, AI in Dota 2, dumb criminals, and more.
In this post we explain why digital clutter can cost you your job.
Three real-world examples to illustrate the dangers of digital clutter.
It appears the ASUS incident was just one part of the large-scale operation.
The tools that can help preserve your online privacy.
Fake technical support websites and accounts in social networks pose a real danger. How to spot and avoid them.
Trojanized HID devices as well as surveilling or malicious cables are serious threats that can be used to compromise even air-gapped systems.
This episode brings you stories of Amazon Alexa, a UK government BCC error, and so-called smart-car apps with hard-coded passwords.
Our proactive security technologies uncovered an attempt to exploit another zero-day vulnerability in win32k.sys.
A look at the complexities of public attribution and why nation-states doing it will have real-world implications.
The Microsoft Office threat landscape, and the technologies that help us catch related zero-day exploits, were the focus of this talk at the SAS 2019 conference.