Most Americans hold the false belief that they have a firm grip on their home network’s security level and children’s internet activities even though they have taken few steps to ensure that this is true.
Rhode Island Cybersecurity Commission issued a report that, if followed, would place the state on a path toward being better able to defend its residents against cyberattacks by improving or expanding existing agencies along with increasing the level of communication between the state and federal government.
Adobe has issued a security advisory for an Adobe Flash Player zero-day exploit being used by the folks behind the Pawn Storm cyber espionage campaign to target foreign ministries worldwide.
After a series of successful DDoS attacks that took place in just one year, a Rutgers University student has started a campaign on Change.org demanding the college refund a tuition increase that was implemented to pay for improved internet security at the school.
America’s Thrift Stores reported a breach that compromised credit card information for an unknown number of its customers who shopped at the 18-store chain in September 2015.
A published report states presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s private email server was probed by several hacking teams from China, Germany and South Korea after she stepped down as secretary of state in 2013.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation, (FBI) issued a warning yesterday to consumers stating that their newly-issued EMV, or chip, credit card is still vulnerable.
The amount of financial damage a cyberattack inflicts on a company depends on many variables, but on average an enterprise-level corporation can expect to pay out more than $550,000 to recover from a typical attack.
Three U.S. senators are looking for answers from T-Mobile and Experian regarding the data breach last week that led to 15 million people having their personal information compromised.