
Google wants to make your digital life—in its ecosystem, anyway—passwordless and more secure.
Google wants to make your digital life—in its ecosystem, anyway—passwordless and more secure.
Plus: Hackers hit the Mormon Church, Signal plans to ditch SMS for Android, and a Fat Bear election erupts in scandal.
The Infowars host now knows the cost of “free speech”—but does the landmark judgment signal a crackdown on disinformation?
By releasing half a million users’ transactions in a bankruptcy court filing, the company has opened a vast breach in its users’ financial privacy.
The company says it hardened the security of its new flagship phones—and plans to release a built-in Android VPN.
Plus: The US warns of a mysterious military contractor breach, a “poisoned” version of the Tor Browser is tracking Chinese users, and more.
Plus: CIA failures allegedly got US informants killed, a former NSA worker is charged under the Espionage Act, and more.
People around the world are rallying to subvert Iran’s internet shutdown, but actually pulling it off is proving difficult and risky.
For decades, security researchers warned about techniques for hijacking virtualization software. Now one group has put them into practice.
Damage to the pipeline that runs between Russia and Germany is being treated as deliberate. Finding out what happened may not be straightforward.