Five reasons mobile apps need protection
Cybercriminals can target anyone who uses your applications; keeping users safe is also partly up to you.
19 articles
Cybercriminals can target anyone who uses your applications; keeping users safe is also partly up to you.
It makes sense to assess risks and carefully craft a protection strategy before adopting mobile device usage at work.
The usual argument “do you really need an antivirus” quite often goes something like this: — I don’t need antivirus! I have nothing to steal! Viruses? Ransomware? Go on and
Do you like privacy? Well, let me introduce you to a new player in the encrypted messaging game:Secret Conversations. It comes from a messaging service many are already using, Facebook
On August 25, WhatsApp published a blog post detailing its new terms of use. These types of posts rarely generate buzz, but this post detailed end-to-end encryption, exploration of business,
Last week, we talked about desktop ransomware, which is certainly nasty stuff. Ransomware is found not only on desktops, but also on mobile devices — and it is also on
Nowadays PCs are protected much better than before. The up-to-date Windows 8.1 comes with a built-in firewall and a type of anti-virus protection delivered via Defender. Browser developers continue to
When the iPhone and app store rolled out, there was a phrase that became ubiquitous to our lives becoming more connected: “There’s an app for that.” Fast-forward to 2016 and
Over the past few weeks, we’ve discussed a few areas where you should brush up on your personal privacy settings for both Facebook and Google. Chances are you read it
Apple malware targets iOS by infecting OS X machines and then swapping legitimate apps for malicious ones as soon as an iOS device connects via USB.
Today, users are readily spending their money on house arrest-style services similar to those used for tracking criminals. They call them fitness trackers.
Twitter debuts a grand but simple plan to replace passwords where your phone number is your username and an SMS-generated code is your password.
Google’s mobile operating system joins Apple’s iOS in offering full disk encryption by default to all users in its newest version — Android 5.0 aka Lollipop.
One simple Android game can get as much information about the smartphone’s owner as a real spy can.
New mobile and wearable devices offer users a robust set of innovative features and utilities but they often face the same traditional threats as old fashioned computers.
According to research by Kaspersky Lab, 22 percent of phishing scams on the web target Facebook.
Discussing security and the privacy strengths and weaknesses in the Apple’s soon-to-be-released iOS 8.
Data breaches seemed to dominate the security news in May, but mobile ransomware emerged as well and there was good and bad privacy news from the tech giants.
Android devices store data on the SD card and the internal space where apps are kept.