
Secure WIFI router scam
There will always be fraudsters who take advantage of the desire for security by overpricing normal products and claiming that these have “security features”. As in this case… Read more

There will always be fraudsters who take advantage of the desire for security by overpricing normal products and claiming that these have “security features”. As in this case… Read more

Remember our warnings regarding VPN use and security flaws that all VPNs have? Now this: FBI warning: This zero-day VPN software flaw was exploited by APT hackers.

A malware vendor has set up a fake website claiming to be from Amnesty International, offering gullible users software that purports to protect them from the NSO Group’s Pegasus malware. In reality it is a Remote Access Trojan (RAT).

We have to remind you of our approach when it comes to encryption: it is for average people to use and will only defend you against (some) hackers. It will not protect you at all against law enforcement, as you will read in this article.

Government officials in the US are using location data from millions of mobile phones to better understand the movements of Americans during the coronavirus pandemic and its potential impact on the spread of the disease.

This case, discovered by Indian cybersecurity researcher Anand Prakash, was just a bug of bad programming, and is euphemistically called IDOR, short for Insecure Direct Object Reference.