Facebook wants your nudes
Want to protect your intimate photos from ever going public? Facebook has a suggestion: Upload them yourself!
241 articles
Want to protect your intimate photos from ever going public? Facebook has a suggestion: Upload them yourself!
Take our quiz and find out if your online dating activity is likely to come back and bite you.
You can’t do anything to prevent global security breaches, but you can protect your own data. Here’s how Kaspersky Security Cloud can help.
We are used to entrusting dating apps with our innermost secrets. How carefully do they treat this information?
Our research shows most users of online dating sites fudge information about themselves. Why they do it and what you can do about it.
Transatlantic Cable Podcast episode 2: autonomous pizza delivery, Sarahah’s privacy issues, reprieve for victims of Yahoo!’s data breach and more.
Equifax had a data breach impacting 143 million Americans. What’s next?
Can I interest you in a nice, long, legally binding document? It’ll only take a few hours and maybe a law degree. No? You’re not alone.
The trendy Nimses social network has a ways to go in terms of security and privacy.
Everyone is used to seeing targeted ads on the Internet. Now ads employing the same principles are emerging offline.
It turns out there are bots in Tinder and OkCupid. Who wants that?
Think connected toys for kids are more secure than those for adults? Think again.
One day I found out that someone was passing off my photos as their own. Here’s what I did.
There’s been a lot of talk lately about privacy protection and VPNs. But what exactly is a VPN? We explain in simple words.
Attentive listeners such as Apple Siri and Amazon Echo have settled down in our houses. What’s the harm?
Cameras in buildings, public areas, and even at home spy on us without our knowledge or consent. What can we do about it?
The days of dropping cheesy pick-up lines at social gatherings are coming to an end. With dating websites and apps, it has become way easier to find a partner online. But is it safe?
When web services collapse, they bury users’ data under their ruins. How can we solve this problem?