SAS preview: Brian Bartholomew
In this Security Analyst Summit preview, Jeff sits down with Brian Bartholomew of GReAT to discuss the conference and his upcoming training on threat intelligence.
3313 articles
In this Security Analyst Summit preview, Jeff sits down with Brian Bartholomew of GReAT to discuss the conference and his upcoming training on threat intelligence.
In this episode, Dave and Jeff talk New Year’s cybersecurity and privacy resolutions.
Employees going away for the winter break? We explain what to do to keep trips from turning into corporate data leaks.
In this episode, Dave and Jeff discuss ways to help protect your family’s home over the holidays.
They say they have video of you watching porn, threaten to send it to your friends, and demand ransom in bitcoins? Don’t pay! We explain how this scam works.
In this episode, Dave and Jeff discuss the perils of online banking, a new secret surveillance in London, healthcare under attack, and more.
Why you shouldn’t open messages with e-cards from strangers, or believe that someone gave you an Amazon gift card for Christmas.
New research from Kaspersky Lab highlights the particular importance of cybersecurity in healthcare.
In this episode, Jeff sits down with Vicente Diaz of Kaspersky Lab’s GReAT to discuss a review of APTs in 2018 and what 2019 may hold.
Here’s how to delete or temporarily disable your Instagram account and back up your photos if you want to take a break from the social media service.
How cybercriminals blocked Marcie’s iPhone, and how to avoid a similar fate.
Thanks to our proactive technologies, zero-day vulnerability CVE-2018-8611 was neutralized.
In this episode, Dave and Jeff discuss Facebook’s battle with ad-blockers, NotPetya ransomware, Lenovo losing employees’ private data, and more.
The 5 most common ways spammers can trick you into paying them or giving up your personal information.
Ready to delete your Twitter account? Here’s how. But you’d better back up your tweets first.
Dave and Jeff take a look at how promoting cryptocoins has backfired for two well-known celebs — and why hacked printers promoted PewDiePie.
Malefactors do not need to infect your computers with malware if they can just plug their devices right into your network.
50,000 printers worldwide suddenly printed a leaflet in support of youtuber PewDiePie. How can you protect your printer from hackers?
In this edition of the Kaspersky Lab podcast, Jeff sits down with David Jacoby to discuss the true value of online identities to crooks on the dark web.
Designer Mark used the same password for all of his accounts — and lived to regret it. Here’s his story.