
The popular security devices are tracking (and sharing) more than you might think.

A Tehran-linked hack of a NATO member marks a significant escalation against the backdrop of US-Iran nuclear talks.

What’s it like to be responsible for a billion people’s digital security? Just ask the company’s Morse researchers.

SIKE was a contender for post-quantum-computing encryption. It took researchers an hour and a single PC to break it.

Roman Sterlingov, accused of laundering $336 million, is proclaiming his innocence—and challenging a key investigative tool.

Plus: A Google Chrome patch licks the DevilsTongue spyware, Android’s kernel gets a tune-up, and Microsoft fixes 84 flaws.

Plus: Google delays the end of cookies (again), EU officials were targeted with Pegasus spyware, and more of the top security news.

Democratic senators lacked actionable gun data for their negotiations—so they passed mental health reform instead.

Despite the DOJ vowing to protect people’s ability to travel out of state for abortion care, legal experts warn not to take that freedom for granted.