Five reasons mobile apps need protection
Cybercriminals can target anyone who uses your applications; keeping users safe is also partly up to you.
17 articles
Cybercriminals can target anyone who uses your applications; keeping users safe is also partly up to you.
It makes sense to assess risks and carefully craft a protection strategy before adopting mobile device usage at work.
How messages with confirmation codes from banks are intercepted and what can you do to protect yourself.
Germany and India officially challenge changes to WhatsApp’s data-sharing policy.
Mobile ransomware is on the rise. We discuss the most popular ransomware families, speculate on some statistics, and suggest the best means of protection.
A look at the evolution of mobile threats in 2015 and some predictions for 2016
While many mobile applications serve as a mere distraction, these apps can help simplify or streamline your daily life.
Facebook will now let Google index the mobile app from the search engine.
Our vocabulary continues to evolve as we see slang enter our lexicon. From Googling to memes once-thought silly words have become accepted. This evolution is also impacting the way we write and punctuate statements online.
The latest in a long line of whistle-blower Edward Snowden’s National Security Agency revelations may be among the most shocking: that the NSA and its British counterpart, GCHQ, allegedly compromised
Apple malware targets iOS by infecting OS X machines and then swapping legitimate apps for malicious ones as soon as an iOS device connects via USB.
There’s been much hoopla in recent weeks over claims from Apple and Google that user content stored in the latest iterations of the iOS and Android operating systems is encrypted
One simple Android game can get as much information about the smartphone’s owner as a real spy can.
New mobile and wearable devices offer users a robust set of innovative features and utilities but they often face the same traditional threats as old fashioned computers.
According to research by Kaspersky Lab, 22 percent of phishing scams on the web target Facebook.
Data breaches seemed to dominate the security news in May, but mobile ransomware emerged as well and there was good and bad privacy news from the tech giants.
Android devices store data on the SD card and the internal space where apps are kept.