New variants of the Bandook malware that are digitally signed have been used in a recent wave of attacks on organizations in many industries.
The Nigeria Police Force, in partnership with Interpol and Group-IB, has arrested three men suspected of being part of a cybercriminal gang that specialized in business-email-compromise scams.
A critical command injection vulnerability (CVE-2020-4006) with no fix available has been discovered in VMware Workspace One.
European law enforcement officials have arrested two suspects for allegedly running a pair of crypter services that help malware slip past security software.
The FBI has always advised victims not to pay ransomware groups, but its thinking has evolved as attacks have proliferated and worsened.
The latest research out of Kenna Security and Cyentia Institute compared how quickly defenders could remediate vulnerabilities and how quickly attackers could exploit the vulnerability in the wild.
Congress has unanimously passed the bipartisan IoT Cybersecurity Improvement Act, which would set minimum security requirements for developing, patching, and configuring Internet of Things.
Firefox 83 includes an option to force HTTPS connections to any site that offers them.
A coalition of civil liberties groups from the U.S. and Europe is warning about the potential consequences of backdoors in encryption systems.
The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency’s role goes beyond national security and securing elections. Any shakeup at CISA’s leadership level would affect the work the agency has been doing with privacy sector organizations.
Google has fixed two vulnerabilities in Chrome that have been targeted by attackers in recent days.
Zoe Lindsey, Pete Baker, and Dennis Fisher break down the delightfully goofy and moderately incoherent 1995 film Johnny Mnemonic.
The Trickbot malware operation is back, with a fresh spam campaign delivering malicious Word documents.
Cyentia Institute analyzed some of the costliest, most damaging security incidents and found that they impacted organizations differently.
Starting Dec. 8, all iOS and Mac apps will be required to print "privacy labels" telling users upfront how the apps use their information, just as food manufacturers are required to print nutritional labels on food to provide nutrition information such as calories and ingredients.