Google plugs KRACK wifi security flaw in November Android patch
Google gives Android vendors a fix for the KRACK wifi bug affecting 820 million devices. How long will it take for Android OEMs to deliver the patch to end-user devices?
Google gives Android vendors a fix for the KRACK wifi bug affecting 820 million devices. How long will it take for Android OEMs to deliver the patch to end-user devices?
Be prepared to hear more about FormBook, an unsophisticated but readily available infection service.
Ransomware and pretend-ransomware are terrible for your business, but they could help spawn the cyber insurance market.
Over two million Windows systems may have been affected by a compromised version of crapware-cleaner CCleaner.
Maersk reports largest losses yet of firms affected by the NotPetya outbreak in June.
Microsoft patches dozens of dangerous bugs in its August update, many of them affecting its Edge JavaScript engine.
Comparisons of an old version of Petya and the this week's Petya suggest money was not the motivation.
Ransomware sweeps the globe with the same exploit as WannaCry but is better designed.
Security researchers are pressing ahead with a problematic plan to pay for access to monthly dumps from the murky Shadow Brokers operation.
Russia's President Vladimir Putin has called for immediate discussions over government created exploits in response to the WannaCrypt attacks.
As Microsoft patched Windows Defender from a Google hack, it announced “dead” antivirus had "evolved"
In a sign of slowly maturing managerial attitudes towards security, a new survey found that CSOs are feeling less pressure from management to fast-track IT projects and new technology rollouts. They may also be finding that detecting insider threats is easier than they think – although many are still running periodic vulnerability assessments that may be a recipe for disaster.
David Braue | 18 Apr | Read more
Attackers are targeting Office users with a flaw that Microsoft hasn’t patched yet. But it will patch it tomorrow, according to the researcher who first reported the bug to Microsoft.
Microsoft wants hackers to focus on malicious attachments and macros.
Research organization RAND Corporation has released a study that looks at the life 200 zero-day exploits.