Cryptocurrency miners in Youtube ads
While you’re watching YouTube, someone might just be using your device to mine cryptocurrency.
77 articles
While you’re watching YouTube, someone might just be using your device to mine cryptocurrency.
The cryptomining boom is helping scammers make money out of thin air. The latest method involves fake currency and ransomware.
If someone offers cryptocurrency for nothing, remember the only free cheese is in a mousetrap. Here’s what’s really going on.
Hacked programs freely distributed online are found to be equipped with a hidden NiceHash cryptocurrency miner.
What miners and Web miners are, why you need to protect yourself, and how Kaspersky Lab products can assist
The new Loapi Trojan will recruit your smartphone for DDoS attacks, bombard it with ads, or use it to mine cryptocurrency, making it red-hot.
What 2017 will be remembered for, which of our experts’ predictions came true, and what they think about the future
Kaspersky Lab looks ahead to the main threats likely to affect the financial industry in 2018.
Along with economic benefits, any new technology also comes with a certain number of problems. Cryptocurrencies are no exception.
The CryptoShuffler Trojan does its utmost to go unnoticed, stealing Bitcoins on the sly.
Smart contracts have made Ethereum the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency. We explain what Ethereum is and how it fits with the trendy concept of ICOs.
Let’s talk about solving blockchain’s six main problems to help it work better, faster, and more efficiently.
Fraudsters make a fortune mining cryptocurrencies — on your computer, at your expense, and without your knowledge.
Tech giants Intel and IBM are seeking to hire Bitcoin experts, but their interest appears to be focussed on the service’s public ledger rather than the cryptocurrency itself