Three real-world profiles of modern corporate cyberattacks
These attacks didn’t start with sophisticated exploits. Instead, they relied on stolen passwords, too-lenient access rights, and a failure to apply long-released vulnerability patches.
41 articles
These attacks didn’t start with sophisticated exploits. Instead, they relied on stolen passwords, too-lenient access rights, and a failure to apply long-released vulnerability patches.
Kaspersky experts have found that a single fraudulent message in a messaging app leads to an average loss of $733. We break down new AI-powered messaging scam schemes, provide platform-specific statistics, and offer tips on how to protect yourself from digital fraudsters.
We explore the root causes of the talent crisis in the cybersecurity industry and look for possible solutions.
Kaspersky Managed Detection and Response experts identified the adversarial techniques that were most prevalent cybersecurity incidents in 2021.
IT Security Economics 2021 report: Infosec’s top 5 challenges dealing with complex incidents.
Seemingly overnight, the pandemic changed the way we work, and infosec departments are still adjusting. What’s on the horizon for employees in the coming year?
Almost half of women working in tech believe the effects of COVID-19 have delayed, rather than enhanced, their career prospects, survey finds.
Hans Christian Andersen’s report on the Kai infection incident, and the investigation by infosec expert Gerda.
A look at how the near-universal shift to working from home has affected employees’ lives and attitudes toward security.
We surveyed almost 5,000 business decision-makers willing to share their thoughts on cybersecurity and their firms’ attitudes about cyberthreats.
What the Hoax verdict means, and why such software is becoming more of a problem.
Some comments from Kaspersky Lab’s head of information security on the results of the CISO survey.
58% of small and medium-size companies use various public-cloud-based business applications to work with customer data.
Some business owners see cyberprotection as just more software to manage. But it is much more than that.
Cybercriminals have realized that infecting servers is much more profitable than mining on home users’ computers.
As we predicted at the end of 2017, malicious cryptomining is booming in 2018, up by 44%.
Your data may move off-site, but does that mean you’re not responsible for it?
Targeted attacks are dangerous, but that doesn’t mean you should forget about threats that are more common.
Our experts analyzed last year’s financial cyberthreats, and here is their report
Sex sells, as they say in advertising. In cyberspace porn serves as one of the most popular tools for malicious activity.