In a twist of cybernetic irony, LockBit, once the world’s most notorious ransomware gang, has recently been hacked – exposing its secrets, affiliate identities, and negotiation tactics to the world.
Updated at 1:26 p.m. ET Friday If Jeff Bezos can't keep his phone safe, how can the rest of us hope to? Sure, Bezos, Amazon's CEO and the owner of The Washington Post, is smart and presumably has good ...
Hackers are pulling the strings far beyond cyberspace. A research team has uncovered details of a scam to hijack real-world cargo shipments. Here's NPR cybersecurity correspondent Jenna McLaughlin.
(AP) As cars become more like PCs on wheels, what’s to stop a hacker from taking over yours? In recent demonstrations, hackers have shown they can slam a car’s brakes at freeway speeds, jerk the ...
Professor X glares at his workstation computer screen in Michigan, abandons a struggling sentence, and begins to rough-sketch a diagram, shifting back and forth between text and graphics without ...
Hackers claim to have compromised the computer of a North Korean government hacker and leaked its contents online, offering a rare window into a hacking operation by the notoriously secretive nation.
Stanford University's computer network has become the latest battleground in the growing rivalry between humans and artificial intelligence, and this time, the machines are ahead of us. In a ...