Phishing without borders, or why you need to update your router
Cybercriminals are hijacking routers to steal people’s credentials for online banking and services.
2891 articles
Cybercriminals are hijacking routers to steal people’s credentials for online banking and services.
In this episode of the Kaspersky Lab podcast, Dave and Jeff take a look at the latest Facebook snafu, AI in Dota 2, dumb criminals, and more.
In this post we explain why digital clutter can cost you your job.
Three real-world examples to illustrate the dangers of digital clutter.
It appears the ASUS incident was just one part of the large-scale operation.
The tools that can help preserve your online privacy.
Fake technical support websites and accounts in social networks pose a real danger. How to spot and avoid them.
Trojanized HID devices as well as surveilling or malicious cables are serious threats that can be used to compromise even air-gapped systems.
This episode brings you stories of Amazon Alexa, a UK government BCC error, and so-called smart-car apps with hard-coded passwords.
Our proactive security technologies uncovered an attempt to exploit another zero-day vulnerability in win32k.sys.
A look at the complexities of public attribution and why nation-states doing it will have real-world implications.
The Microsoft Office threat landscape, and the technologies that help us catch related zero-day exploits, were the focus of this talk at the SAS 2019 conference.
Jay Rosenberg of GReAT joins Jeff and Ahmed to recap the second day of the Security Analyst Summit in Singapore.
A new APT attack targets the diplomatic mission of an Asian country.
A cybergang that specializes in cyberespionage, with its campaign mostly limited to the Middle East and countries in central Asia.
In this episode of the Kaspersky Lab podcast, Jeff and Ahmed take a look at the first day of the Security Analyst Summit in Singapore.
How criminals use data harvested from users’ devices to fool antifraud systems and siphon money from victims’ accounts.
A story from RSAC 2019 on how domain fronting is used to disguise communications between an infected machine and a command server.
Everyone knows that EXE files can be dangerous for computers running Windows. But it turns out that EXE files can infect macOS too.