How ephemeral metadata may cause real problems
The most dangerous data leaks are the ones people don’t even know about.
26 articles
The most dangerous data leaks are the ones people don’t even know about.
We have more bad news from the Yahoo hack: Even without a yahoo.com account, you may be at risk.
A recent story suggests Google is secretly recording your conversations and discussions. Are they really doing that?
Charging your smartphone’s battery over USB can be dangerous: Thieves can steal your files, infect your smartphone with something nasty — or even brick it.
Do you know how many companies are actually tracking you when you visit a single website? The answer may surprise you.
Check this out to know if you want to fall for one of the latest Facebook scams
Our bionic man Evgeny Chereshnev talks on the biochip in his hand and how it makes you a part of the Internet of Things.
Researcher shows that using data from motion sensors built into a smartwatch one can recognize numbers you press on a numerical pad. How can that affect your security?
VTech, a company that manufactures electronic learning devices, baby monitors, smart toys announced that information from 5 million customer accounts were accessed in an attack.
Passwords have been around since the early days — in 200 B.C., the Romans used them on a day-to-day basis to organize and manage actions of military units. With the
Why you shouldn’t bring your smartphone to the bathroom
In this edition of Security Week infosec digest we’ll cover threecases of companies being hacked and data being leaked and companies reacting on the incidents.
Yesterday The European Court of Justice ruled that the Safe Harbor agreement is invalid: what does this decision mean for your personal data?
Are you committing these six online parenting sins? If so, please stop.
Once more into a breach: 9.7 gigabytes of stolen data with users’ emails, credit card transactions and profiles leaked into the darknet.
A bottle of good scotch in exchange for a day without a smartphone? Would I dare? That’s a piece of cake! That’s what I thought. As it turned out, it’s not that simple nowadays
I was repeatedly asked the question: “Once you decide to become a cyborg, how would your current routine change?” Today I’m going to give you 10 answers for this questions
A New York artist made an exhibition out of making a single private and anonymous cell phone call outside the scope of government spying. Here’s how he did it.
During my first two weeks of the biochip experience I had time to mull over a lot of things. The deluge of questions from the community pushed this process further:
Do you know what your child is doing when s/he holding smartphone or tablet in his/her hands? Maybe everything is fine and s/he is just watching movies or playing game.
The latest privacy-related kerfuffle, involving Lenovo, who thought it was a great idea to pre-install some very nasty adware with gaping security holes, was like a blast from the past.