How risky is the Internet? Researchers say 42%
Almost half of the most-visited websites open visitors to potential dangers. What can you do?
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Almost half of the most-visited websites open visitors to potential dangers. What can you do?
When it comes to online accounts, voicemail is a major security hole. Here’s why.
The 50th edition of the Kaspersky Lab podcast looks into the latest in Google tracking, spam, and hacking ATMs and police body cameras.
KeyPass ransomware is infecting computers worldwide, encrypting almost everything in its path. And it all starts with downloading a seemingly innocuous installer.
How security researchers were able to track down cryptocurrency bots on Twitter.
Take a stroll through your apps and you’re bound to encounter some unfamiliar names. Where do those unaccounted-for apps on your PC come from, and are they safe?
How a sculpture from Japan is scaring WhatsApp users around the world, and how to protect children from such spooks on the Internet.
In this edition of the podcast, Jeff and Dave discuss the Black Hat USA conference, a downside of Fortnite coming to Android, the Reddit hack, and our latest report on the state of malware.
In this part, we consider mobile malware capable of causing real damage to smartphone and tablet users.
In this edition of the podcast, Jeff and Dave discuss a McDonald’s Monopoly whopper, banning miners, hacking by inmates, and more.
When I fell victim to sleight of hand and a little bit of fraud, Find My iPhone didn’t save me. Here’s why.
In this podcast, we sit down with Kaspersky Lab Global Research and Analysis Team member Ido Naor to discuss his upcoming talk at Black Hat.
In this edition, Jeff and Dave discuss Facebook’s investigation of Crimson Hexagon, a voyeur Uber driver and more.
In this edition, Jeff and Dave discuss a Facebook privacy loophole, Walmart patenting listening software, e-mail being too hard, and oh yeah, some data breaches.
In this edition, Jeff and Dave discuss how a McDonald’s drive-thru was hacked, USB drama, and more.
The recently leaked source code actually isn’t Carbanak — it’s another advanced financial malware family. And the leak will likely have a huge ripple effect.
In this edition, Jeff and Dave discuss third parties reading your Gmail, Samsung’s SMS app leaking photos, NYC pranksters, and more.
No PIN on your phone? Pickpockets will thank you for that.
In this edition of the Kaspersky Lab podcast, we discuss the one-year anniversary of NotPetya, GDPR implications, US news sites blocking EU visitors, and more.
As we predicted at the end of 2017, malicious cryptomining is booming in 2018, up by 44%.