What will your future job look like?
People worry about technologies stealing their jobs. Young people are less concerned; many of them are sure that completely new professions will emerge instead.
368 articles
People worry about technologies stealing their jobs. Young people are less concerned; many of them are sure that completely new professions will emerge instead.
Current status and updates regarding the implementation of our Global Transparency Initiative.
This week’s episode of the Kaspersky Podcast looks at Google tracking (and possible lawsuits as a result), Gatwick screen fails and Trello board fails.
Are the IoT’s security issues placing the industry on the road to a litigation nightmare?
How security researchers were able to track down cryptocurrency bots on Twitter.
Any piece of malware can be captured if you know it for what it is — for example, if you use a trainable behavioral model.
In this edition of the podcast, Jeff and Dave discuss the Black Hat USA conference, a downside of Fortnite coming to Android, the Reddit hack, and our latest report on the state of malware.
In this podcast, we sit down with Kaspersky Lab Global Research and Analysis Team member Ido Naor to discuss his upcoming talk at Black Hat.
As Kaspersky Lab’s legal challenge continues, Eugene Kaspersky considers why cybersecurity companies must fight for the industry to stay open and collaborative
How one of the key technologies behind the Kaspersky Lab’s antivirus engine came to be.
Kaspersky hogs the CPU, collaborates with the KGB, and writes viruses? We bust these myths and explain their origins.
Password-based love? Sites that ban humans? In this post, we look at five fun and slightly bizarre projects to get you thinking about security.
In the 41st edition of the Kaspersky Lab podcast, we talk about Apple banning cryptomining, spyware hijacking webcams, spying through baby cameras, and more.
In the 40th edition of the Kaspersky Lab podcast, we look at Apple protecting privacy, Kim Dotcom, the World Cup, and more.
We investigate intercepting smartwatch motion-sensor data to monitor people and steal information.
In this week’s podcast, Jeff and Dave riff on the Chili’s data breach, Facebook’s internal reviews, police falling victim to ransomware, and more.
Our first Transparency Center, as well as “software assembly line” and storage of Kaspersky Security Network data, will be located in Switzerland.
Jeff and Ahmed discuss privacy online, the latest on Cambridge Analytica, and more.
How Twitter’s “not-a-leak” made me realize that remembering passwords no longer works.