Side Eye: eavesdropping using a smartphone’s video camera
How and why did American researchers try to extract sound from a video signal, and was it worth it?
15 articles
How and why did American researchers try to extract sound from a video signal, and was it worth it?
How young children can spend money on games, apps, and even YouTube, and what you can do to protect your wallet.
Do you take your smartphone to lunch with you? How about the shower? How addicted are you, really, to always staying online? Take this quiz and find out.
A look at the evolution of mobile threats in 2015 and some predictions for 2016
There were long time rumors about iPhone malware used to spy on smartphone owners, but now it’s official ―Kaspersky Lab researchers discovered a real life sample of this Trojan.
Our study during World Cup indicates one in four networks are dangerous and you must take care to avoid substantial loss.
Yesterday marked the 10 year anniversary of the first smartphone malware being discovered. Today, Cabir worm looks harmless: it doesn’t steal money or passwords, nor does it delete users’ data. But it drains the battery within
Cabir, the first smartphone virus ever, turns 10. Here are some amusing facts about it.
How iOS 8 and Tizen releases affect smartphone market and security landscape.
App stores offer all the promise of a virtually unlimited range of games and tools, but are rife with pitfalls too. These include bad apps, ballooning costs, and malicious apps, particularly on Android devices.
But while Android’s market figures continue to pile up, so do the knocks against the company’s security protocols.
Kaspersky Internet Security for Android identified and neutralized 100 percent of the malware programs; the average score of the other solutions tested was a 95-percent success rate.
Modern smartphones consume so much energy that charging them once a day is not always enough. When they are used intensively, the user sometimes has to look for a power
BlackBerry’s preeminent Z10 smartphone (and other devices running the BlackBerry operating system beyond version 4.5 for that matter) has a feature built-into its messaging service called “Show What I’m Listening
It’s no longer just your PC that needs protection. These days your information lives on multiple devices – your smartphone, your tablet, even your Mac – & you want to