Voice activated systems are vulnerable to hacking. Researchers from Michigan have found ways to bolster their security.
Some smart watches geared towards children have series security flaws.
- By Sydny Shepard
- Oct 20, 2017
DHS will issue a "binding directive" which will require the implementaion of security measures for email.
- By Sydny Shepard
- Oct 18, 2017
A University of Kansas student was able to use a keystroke logger to gain access to a professor's computers and change his grades.
- By Sydny Shepard
- Oct 17, 2017
The hole in Wi-Fi security affects the vast majority of Wi-Fi devices and networks.
- By Sydny Shepard
- Oct 16, 2017
Oops!...Equifax did it again.
- By Chris Olson
- Oct 16, 2017
According to a new study, 70 percent of employees cannot grasp web security and privacy.
- By Sydny Shepard
- Oct 12, 2017
Yahoo recieved new information to show that all the accounts had been hacked, not just a portion as previously thought.
It seems we can’t go a single day without a new data breach making headlines.
Today, cloud applications are all the rage and for good reason. The cloud allows us to work and play in ways that are so much more productive and engaging.
- By Nicholas Maier
- Oct 01, 2017
As new technologies emerge, ever-vigilant fraudsters remain hard at work searching for and exploiting system weaknesses before they can be patched.
- By Michael Lynch
- Sep 29, 2017
The grocery chain has "recieved information reguarding unauthorized access of payment card information."
Equifax says the two breaches are unrelated.
Hackers have hidden a backdoor in a security application called CCleaner. So far it has 2 billion downloads and has infected 2.3 million people and counting.
Breakthroughs in technology mean that connected cars are shunning physical keys in favor of digital, smartphone-based entry systems.
The US government has officially banned the use of Kaspersky security software in all of its federal agencies.
A set of vulnerabilities present in "almost every" device with Bluetooth capabilities has been revealed by researchers at security firm Armis.
The iOS 11 has been in beta testing for a few weeks now and many users are reporting a new discovered security feature that could boost a user's data security and make it harder for police to find information.
A recent incident in upstate New York has shown that even police departments aren't immune from hacking.
The Atlanta-based company announced the hack on Thursday, and said that intruders were able to access customers' Social Security numbers, addresses, names, birthdays, driver’s license numbers and more.
- By Nicole Crites
- Sep 08, 2017