This week’s ThreatsDay Bulletin covers spyware-laced game cheats, fake installers, infostealer, ransomware, phishing kits, ...
More than 1.6 million social media accounts owned by children are falsely registered with an adult age, a survey by the ...
HANDS-ON Dortania's OpenCore Legacy Patcher lets you run newer versions of macOS on unsupported Intel Macs. It's handy, but ...
A financially motivated Russian threat actor tracked as UAT-11795 is using trojanized software to steal credentials and ...
Andy Burnham has hinted that a wealth tax could be on the way, refusing to rule out the move in a broadcast interview days ...
Red, an in-house AI hacker that attacks its own models to harden GPT-5.6 against prompt injection, and it works too well to release.
A new version of RedHook Android malware uses your phone's own built-in debugging tool to take remote control of your device without needing root access or a USB cable.
Prompt injections, the malicious commands attackers embed into content to entice LLMs to follow them, have been attackers’ go ...
In other news, a DHS database was hacked, Adobe is releasing patches twice a month, and Canada has disrupted ransomware operations.
Windows can link your PC to your activity, AI agents are sending crypto to scammers, and a router backdoor has no fix. Here's what you need to know this week.
Hackers are using this insidious scam to get unwitting victims to install malware themselves.
Palo Alto Networks on Wednesday published advisories describing more than a dozen vulnerabilities affecting its products. The ...