75 articles
The tools that can help preserve your online privacy.
When you’re ready to leave the privacy fever dream that is Facebook, make sure you have everything before you lock the door on your way out.
Here’s how to delete or temporarily disable your Instagram account and back up your photos if you want to take a break from the social media service.
Ready to delete your Twitter account? Here’s how. But you’d better back up your tweets first.
Your online privacy does not depend solely on you. We’ll tell you what your loved ones can give away. (Spoiler: It’s absolutely anything, even DNA.)
Protecting privacy online can be good for our mental health. Two reasons: it makes more time for offline socializing and keeps distracting ads at bay.
In this edition of the Kaspersky Lab podcast the teams from the Transatlantic Cable and Arabic podcasts team up to discuss privacy.
Fake airline giveaways won’t win you a ticket, but they might steal your data.
Jeff and Dave discuss the latest changes at Facebook, a data breach at Panera Bread, the fallout from the ransomware in Atlanta, and more.
Jeff and Dave discuss deleting Facebook accounts, Earth not being flat, new cryptocurrency, and more.
In this podcast, Jeff and Dave discuss the Facebook and Cambridge Analytica debacle, hackers making bomb threats, and more.
The trendy Nimses social network has a ways to go in terms of security and privacy.
Research shows that people who share data digitally are more likely to suffer from data loss and have device issues.
One day I found out that someone was passing off my photos as their own. Here’s what I did.
What would you do to get more likes on a social network? Take our quiz and see if you’re hooked on likes.
It is surprisingly easy to hack airline reservations, obtain banking data and other private information, steal tickets, and rack up air miles.
Facebook has changed its privacy settings several times in the past few years, so we explain once again how to make your account more private.
More than 70% of active Internet users have considered quitting their social networks. What do they have to lose?
A study reveals that people are tired of social networks, but keep using them because they can’t break the ties.