Protecting against individual hackers was difficult enough, but system admins everywhere may have an even harder time with AI-enhanced hacking.
A U.S. government contractor's son, accused of stealing more than $46 million in cryptocurrency from the U.S. Marshals ...
Citrini vs Citadel and AI’s days of future-past; AI Tool of the Week: Lyria 3 in Google Gemini; Did Grok predict the ...
What if a weak research paper did not need better ideas, better data, or better science: just a hidden line of text to fool an AI reviewer? That is the unsettling question behind a new ...
Welcome to the age of AI hacking, in which the right prompts make amateurs into master hackers.
A pair of US lawmakers are calling for an investigation into how easily spies can steal information based on devices’ electromagnetic and acoustic leaks—a spying trick the NSA once codenamed TEMPEST.
A new ClickFix attack variant uses fake CAPTCHA pages instructing victims to paste and execute malicious commands in Windows Terminal.
Your weekly cybersecurity roundup covering the latest threats, exploits, vulnerabilities, and security news you need to know.
Ransomware threat actors tracked as Velvet Tempest are using the ClickFix technique and legitimate Windows utilities to deploy the DonutLoader malware and the CastleRAT backdoor.
Unwitting victims are now being tricked into installing malware via Windows Terminal, but some experts say this is old news.
InstallFix delivers an infostealer to your device.