Mobile beasts and where to find them — part three
Let’s talk about mobile malware that can empty your bank account or spy on you.
377 articles
Let’s talk about mobile malware that can empty your bank account or spy on you.
Fortnite for Android is not available on Google Play. We explain how to download and install it properly, and what else to do to stay safe.
How a seemingly harmless Android application can infect your smartphone using shared external storage.
The infamous Lazarus group’s newest campaign is really hard to detect. Bonus: How cryptocurrencies, cybercriminals, and ramen noodles are connected.
Instagram hacking has been on the rise lately. Here’s what you need to know to avoid losing your precious account.
Almost half of the most-visited websites open visitors to potential dangers. What can you do?
KeyPass ransomware is infecting computers worldwide, encrypting almost everything in its path. And it all starts with downloading a seemingly innocuous installer.
Take a stroll through your apps and you’re bound to encounter some unfamiliar names. Where do those unaccounted-for apps on your PC come from, and are they safe?
How a sculpture from Japan is scaring WhatsApp users around the world, and how to protect children from such spooks on the Internet.
In this part, we consider mobile malware capable of causing real damage to smartphone and tablet users.
More than 400 manufacturing companies became phishing targets.
When I fell victim to sleight of hand and a little bit of fraud, Find My iPhone didn’t save me. Here’s why.
Fileless malware infects workstations and servers in corporate networks.
In this edition, Jeff and Dave discuss how a McDonald’s drive-thru was hacked, USB drama, and more.
The Rakhni encrypting ransomware, known since 2013, is now trying its hand at mining Monero.
It’s not Malevich’s Black Square. This is what a screenshot taken by a suspicious application on a computer protected by Kaspersky Lab products looks like.
No PIN on your phone? Pickpockets will thank you for that.
In part one of our mobile malware series, we cover infectious Android malware — adware, subscribers, and flooders — and how mobile viruses can damage your smartphone or tablet…
How tools designed to study and protect rare species can turn from gamekeeper to poacher.
Did you see that new fully loaded Android smartphone, the one that looks too good for the price? Well, it may include some unwanted extras.