How to fight delayed phishing
Phishing links in e-mails to company employees often become active after initial scanning. But they still can and must be caught.
973 articles
Phishing links in e-mails to company employees often become active after initial scanning. But they still can and must be caught.
Phishers are using the Wuhan coronavirus as bait, trying to hook e-mail credentials.
One explanation of phishing success lies in a known psychological effect.
Scammers prod employees to take performance appraisals but in reality siphon off their work account passwords.
No matter how good malefactors are at pretending to be the real deal, you can still spot travel phishing if you know these three simple rules.
Cybercriminals are hijacking routers to steal people’s credentials for online banking and services.
Scammers are sending tons of YouTube direct messages pretending to be from top YouTubers. They’re phishing. Here’s how the scheme works.
Using only publicly available sources, how much can you find out about someone?
The winter sales season is the hottest time of the year for shoppers and financial phishers. Be careful!
Beta-test program results confirm that e-mail administrators should think twice before relying on basic built-in protection.
If someone offers cryptocurrency for nothing, remember the only free cheese is in a mousetrap. Here’s what’s really going on.
Over the weekend, Snapchat was compromised via a phishing email pretending to be from company CEO.
Late in December, the term “whaling” mildly spiked in cybersecurity-related media outlets. The term isn’t exactly new, but it isn’t encountered as often as “phishing”.
There are some interesting findings in our Q3 spam report.
Sometimes even cybercriminals go fishing. They hunt for a special goldfish — our personal data. So, what can you do to protect yourself from phishing?
We received more accolades from AV-Comparatives in late August, and we would like to take a moment to share them.
Kaspersky Lab’s Q2 report on spam and phishing has arrived, and brought little surprises.
In Q1 of 2015, the amount of spam in the world’s email traffic is less than it was a few years ago, but still too high. Junk mail goes from annoying to dangerous when infected by cybercriminals.
Kaspersky Lab experts detected a sly scheme that allows fraudsters to steal personal data without your login and password.