A convincing Microsoft lookalike tricks users into downloading malware that steals passwords, payments, and account access.
Adobe patches a critical PDF flaw exploited for months, allowing attackers to bypass sandbox protections and deliver malware.
AI breakthroughs, zero-day exploits, and layoffs reveal how this week’s tech news pivots on fast-moving artificial ...
Page speed for SEO is no longer a nice-to-have checkbox on a technical audit list. It is a direct ranking factor, a conv ...
OpenAI executives say they will introduce a new artificial intelligence model for “high-value professional work” as the ...
A data breach at the city attorney's office led to a massive cache of LAPD files being dumped online. Here's what we know ...
Adobe has released an emergency security update for Acrobat Reader to fix a vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2026-34621, that ...
Learn how to install and run Google's new Gemma 4 AI models locally on your PC or Mac for free, offline, and privacy-focused ...
MIAMI (AP) — Former Miami Hurricanes edge rusher Rueben Bain Jr., a top prospect in the NFL draft, was involved in a traffic ...
After years of watching ChatGPT and Gemini hog the limelight, Apple is reportedly shipping a standalone Siri app, codenamed ...
President Donald Trump says he finds it insulting to hear critics say he does not have a plan to win the U.S.-Israeli war on ...
New "Storm" infostealer skips local decryption, sending browser data to attacker servers. Varonis shows how server-side decryption enables session hijacking, bypassing passwords and MFA.