Transatlantic Cable podcast, episode 47
In this edition, Jeff and Dave discuss Facebook’s investigation of Crimson Hexagon, a voyeur Uber driver and more.
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In this edition, Jeff and Dave discuss Facebook’s investigation of Crimson Hexagon, a voyeur Uber driver and more.
What’s new in the Kaspersky 2019 product lineup? Speed, security, and design improvements.
Kaspersky hogs the CPU, collaborates with the KGB, and writes viruses? We bust these myths and explain their origins.
In the Netherlands, the creators of one of the first ransomware cryptors are on trial, thanks largely to us.
In this edition, Jeff and Dave discuss a Facebook privacy loophole, Walmart patenting listening software, e-mail being too hard, and oh yeah, some data breaches.
We created a new service that can provide a detailed dossier on any file Kaspersky Lab’s systems have encountered.
Some business owners see cyberprotection as just more software to manage. But it is much more than that.
Kaspersky Lab is contributing to project COMPACT to help local public administrations become more cyberresilient.
In this edition, Jeff and Dave discuss how a McDonald’s drive-thru was hacked, USB drama, and more.
The recently leaked source code actually isn’t Carbanak — it’s another advanced financial malware family. And the leak will likely have a huge ripple effect.
Password-based love? Sites that ban humans? In this post, we look at five fun and slightly bizarre projects to get you thinking about security.
The Rakhni encrypting ransomware, known since 2013, is now trying its hand at mining Monero.
In this edition, Jeff and Dave discuss third parties reading your Gmail, Samsung’s SMS app leaking photos, NYC pranksters, and more.
Cybercriminals have realized that infecting servers is much more profitable than mining on home users’ computers.
It’s not Malevich’s Black Square. This is what a screenshot taken by a suspicious application on a computer protected by Kaspersky Lab products looks like.
No PIN on your phone? Pickpockets will thank you for that.
In this edition of the Kaspersky Lab podcast, we discuss the one-year anniversary of NotPetya, GDPR implications, US news sites blocking EU visitors, and more.
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?