Rising attacks against digital asset holders highlight how data collection, regulatory reporting, and identity leaks are creating unintended personal security risks.
Security cameras, traffic cameras, and cameras on other people’s vehicles can all capture individuals going about their daily routines. Data Doctors’ Ken Colburn said the volume of cameras in daily ...
Homeland Security aims to combine its face and fingerprint systems into one big biometric platform—after dismantling ...
By Yangchula Bhutia Eduardo B. Sandoval, UNSW Sydney Last year, Norwegian-US tech company 1X announced a strange new product: ...
A good VPN can protect your privacy and data, as long as you use it correctly. Here’s how to choose the right one, cut ...
It is engineered in advance In Uganda’s rapidly digitising economy, information security is no longer a back-office function delegated solely to IT teams. It has become a strategic leadership ...
Your cameras are almost certainly capable of capturing more than you realize — but that doesn’t automatically mean you should ...
Federal data shows rising healthcare breaches as Mississippi lacks statewide hospital cybersecurity standards ...
Discord's new age verification system faces scrutiny after hackers expose parts of its code, raising privacy and security ...
New U.S. cybersecurity rules for the defense sector are leading some small suppliers to rethink military work due to high ...
When companies and governments expand data collection in the name of security, sometimes the only way you can object is to opt out. And with facial recognition, the time to object is now.
Plus, governments around the globe are coming for your privacy, AI malware hits Android, and a luxury hotel scheme that's actually pretty impressive.