More privacy problems for WhatsApp
Germany and India officially challenge changes to WhatsApp’s data-sharing policy.
1115 articles
Germany and India officially challenge changes to WhatsApp’s data-sharing policy.
i-Dressup, a community for teenage girls, is actively leaking passwords in plain text.
We have more bad news from the Yahoo hack: Even without a yahoo.com account, you may be at risk.
Yahoo is expected to announce a “massive” data breach soon. Although the news is not yet confirmed, you should be proactive and check the security of your Yahoo account.
When Google announced Allo, we thought the search giant was finally paying attention to users’ concerns about privacy. Reality turned to be quite different.
Security researchers claim that they have managed to remotely hack an unmodified Tesla Model S with the latest firmware installed.
Kaspersky Lab sponsors a competition hosted by The Economist for college students in the UK and USA to make voting more secure.
We discovered a Pokémon Go Trojan in Google Play. It had already been downloaded 500,000 times.
The field of cybersecurity is facing a talent shortage. Our new Dublin office is here to help.
Fantom ransomware displays a fake Windows Update screen while encrypting your files.
Hackers have stolen 68 million account credentials from Dropbox dating back to 2012. Here’s what you should do.
How Kaspersky Lab helped the Russian police catch the cybercriminals behind the Lurk banking Trojan and Angler exploit kit.
One Instagram post with a picture of a ticket can cost you a whole lot of time and money and ruin your day. This is how you can avoid it
Catching criminals, waking up a sleepy driver, stopping teens from buying cigarettes — facial recognition can help us accomplish all that and more.
The changeover from magnetic stripe cards to chip cards cost millions of dollars but promised greater security. At Black Hat 2016, researchers told us that the new cards are nonetheless insecure.
Researchers discovered a hack that affects 100 million Volkswagen cars. And the equipment needed costs just $40.
Today, it seems everything can be hacked. Even your vibrator. This is the tale of developers of very intimate goods who do not value the privacy of their clients.
DotA 2 forum breach leaks 2 million accounts, probably has consequences
Up close and personal, one Kaspersky Labs editor’s experience with the system failure at Delta Air Lines.
Charlie Miller and Chris Valasek learned to hack a car’s steering wheel, brakes, and acceleration. They presented their finding at Black Hat USA 2016.