Kids and cybersecurity: what parents should be aware of in 2024
We explore the key cybersecurity trends that parents should be aware of, and provide tips on how to safeguard their children’s online activities
99 articles
We explore the key cybersecurity trends that parents should be aware of, and provide tips on how to safeguard their children’s online activities
Cybersecurity trends to consider and new threats to protect against in 2024.
Attackers are hijacking hotel accounts on Booking.com, and stealing their clients’ banking data through its internal messaging system.
How unfortunate investors in commodities, cryptocurrency, and other assets get scammed in apps found in official stores.
During the pre-holiday period, attackers are sending invoices to companies for the delivery of non-existent documents.
How Kaspersky products provide multi-layered financial protection, and what threats it can protect you from.
We’ve found several scam investment-apps in the App Store that dupe users out of personal information.
How URL shorteners work, how they can be used, and the privacy and security threats they pose.
How cybercriminals force victims to work for them with offers of easy money.
Four threats you might face when using Airbnb, and tips for avoiding them.
Crypto Olympics, or the full gamut of blockchain attacks: the biggest, most sophisticated, most audacious cryptocurrency heists of all time.
We explain how the advanced malware DoubleFinger downloads GreetingGhoul, a stealer that preys on cryptocurrency wallets.
How scammers can hack your YouTube channel without knowing a password and second factor.
Full review of a fake cryptowallet incident. It looks and feels like a Trezor wallet, but puts all your crypto-investments into the hands of criminals.
Why you should purge your company’s LinkedIn page from fake employee profiles, and how to do it.
Hardware crypto wallets are effective at protecting your cryptocurrency, but they can still be stolen from. Let’s address the risks their owners need to be protected from.
Scammers are pretending to offer users tens of thousands of dollars, supposedly accumulated in an account on an “automated cloud-mining platform”.
How scammers force website owners to add potentially dangerous links by threatening harsh consequences for copyright infringement.
We investigate why chip cards are no panacea, and what precautions should be taken when making a payment.