
653 articles
On this week’s podcast, Jeff and David discuss Facebook fallout, Amazon’s “voice-sniffing” patent, and a paid version of Google.
Most computer infections come from visiting porn sites, or so some people say. Are they right?
The day I turned home network defender and stopped making fun of IoT developers.
Chrome learns to block ads by itself. What has Google come up with, and how will it help users?
In this week’s edition of Kaspersky Lab’s podcast, Jeff and Dave discuss a Ethereum scam in Twitter, China’s surveillance glasses, and iPhone source code on GitHub.
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.
In this week’s edition of Kaspersky Lab’s podcast, Jeff and Dave discuss a vulnerability in Sonic the Hedgehog, a woman who has a habit of sneaking onto flights and more.
Many people assume that an HTTPS connection means that the site is secure. In fact, HTTPS is increasingly being used by malicious sites, especially phishing ones.
In this week’s edition of Kaspersky Lab’s podcast, Jeff and Dave discuss Alexa ads and helping police, Intel’s “meltdown,” and more.
In this week’s edition Kaspersky Lab’s podcast, Dave and Jeff look at hackable heating, using Twitter to predict traffic jams and how to stop the spread of fake news.
The Cybersecurity Summit is more than you might think: We talked space, blockchain, quantum computing, and more
This week’s Transatlantic Cable podcast dishes on pizza, unsafe kids smartwatches, and more.
In this week’s edition of the Transatlantic Cable podcast, we discuss Equifax, PornHub, pulled AI and more.
The largest motor show in the world is the best place to see what cars will look like in the near future.
A few more tips about gaming accounts safety, or How to protect your Steam, Uplay, Origin, battle.net and so on.
A story about a large malicious campaign carried out in Facebook Messenger — and how it worked.
Modern technology actually helps phone scammers — what you need to know to stay safe.
Can you be sure the encrypted USB drives you’re using won’t reveal your company’s secrets to hackers? Problem is, current certifications can’t guarantee it.