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Transatlantic Cable podcast, episode 7
This week’s Transatlantic Cable podcast dishes on pizza, unsafe kids smartwatches, and more.
777 articles
This week’s Transatlantic Cable podcast dishes on pizza, unsafe kids smartwatches, and more.
Every Wi-Fi network using WPA or WPA2 encryption is vulnerable to a key reinstallation attack. Here are some more details and means of protection.
In this week’s edition of the Transatlantic Cable podcast, we discuss Equifax, PornHub, pulled AI and more.
One of the most popular porn sites in the world was serving malware through ads to millions of its users.
The real scale of the Yahoo breach (spoiler: 3 billion), Facebook’s own Face ID, UK Lottery DDoS, and more.
The largest motor show in the world is the best place to see what cars will look like in the near future.
Transatlantic Cable Podcast episode 4: tax scams, trading data for swag, AI password cracking, and more.
A new blocker called nRansom locks users out of their computers and demands not money, but nude pictures.
A few more tips about gaming accounts safety, or How to protect your Steam, Uplay, Origin, battle.net and so on.
Several months ago, our experts found a bunch of vulnerabilities in Android apps that allow users to control their cars remotely. What has changed since then?
Fraudsters make a fortune mining cryptocurrencies — on your computer, at your expense, and without your knowledge.
Transatlantic Cable Podcast episode 2: autonomous pizza delivery, Sarahah’s privacy issues, reprieve for victims of Yahoo!’s data breach and more.
A story about a large malicious campaign carried out in Facebook Messenger — and how it worked.
This week’s Transatlantic Cable podcast features stories on Burger King, scams, Instagram security and more.
How mobile Trojans exploit WAP billing to steal money, and how to protect yourself.
Modern technology actually helps phone scammers — what you need to know to stay safe.
Android Trojans have been mimicking banking apps, messengers, and social apps for a while. Taxi-booking apps are next on the list.
Black Hat 2017 demonstrated that Microsoft enterprise solutions could be quite useful in attackers’ hands.
Assembly robots are made with physical safety in mind, but hacking these machines is still frighteningly easy