FinSpy — commercial spyware
FinSpy is spyware for Android, iOS, Windows, macOS, and Linux that is sold legally. What it can do and how to defend yourself.
3201 articles
FinSpy is spyware for Android, iOS, Windows, macOS, and Linux that is sold legally. What it can do and how to defend yourself.
Kaspersky joins the Disclose.io project to offer safe harbor for security researchers.
For the 100th edition of the Kaspersky podcast, Jeff and Dave discuss the hammer of GDPR coming down on British Airways and Marriott, and look back on some past stories.
Using persuasion instead of viruses: How scammers talk people into granting remote access to their computers.
When the apps on your phone don’t update automatically, and you can’t find the right setting, we tell you where to look.
This ransomware uses managed service providers’ infrastructure or the Oracle Weblogic vulnerability to infect and encrypt victims’ systems.
Dave and Jeff discuss the latest trend in US cities paying the ransom, hacking the smart home, Cirque du Soleil app issues and more.
Fibaro Smart Home Centers can be hacked, and the consequences for smart home owners are big.
Apple to roll out a system of its own for quick login to websites and apps. Learn what makes it different from similar offers.
Dave and Jeff discuss a Florida town that paid to restore data following a ransomware attack, Instagram improving account restoration, and more.
We explain how to leave the social network while keeping some posts as a memento, even if you forgot your password and changed your phone number.
How some students are cheating their way to exam success with dark web diplomas and hacked grades.
In this episode of the Kaspersky podcast, Dave and Jeff discuss deepfakes at Facebook, telcos behaving badly, Alexa spying, and more.
Cybercriminals may use your resources for cryptocurrency mining. How you can prevent it.
How a photo editor app from Google Play secretly signed up users for unwanted paid services.
What the Hoax verdict means, and why such software is becoming more of a problem.
A new spam mailing threatens the reputations of small businesses websites.
Digital signatures cannot solve the requirement of checking the authenticity of documents required by KYC procedures. That is where smart contracts may come in handy.