The cunning way that hackers break so-called unbreakable encryptionByJean-Louis GasséePublishedJanuary 11, 2016
An FBI official admits it uses the same security loopholes as hackersByKit EatonPublishedDecember 15, 2015
A Golden Key for governments to bypass cryptography will never work, because mathByJean-Louis GasséePublishedDecember 15, 2015
Safe passwords shouldn’t require people to have a PhD in computer scienceByJason HongPublishedNovember 18, 2015
The Economist’s anti-ad blocker was hacked, exposing users to malwareByAshley RodriguezPublishedNovember 6, 2015
A pledge to stop hacking US companies has not stopped China’s government from hacking US companiesByAliza GoldbergPublishedOctober 20, 2015
A European’s stolen credit-card data is worth more than an American’sByAlice TruongPublishedOctober 17, 2015
One of America’s premier research institutions was hacked—and the signs point to ChinaByGwynn GuilfordPublishedOctober 16, 2015
A rare detailed look inside the IRS’s massive data breach, via a security expert who was a victimByKeith CollinsPublishedAugust 27, 2015
What’s in the Ashley Madison database that hackers released onlineByNikhil SonnadPublishedAugust 19, 2015
The Russian internet security firm Kaspersky is accused of sabotaging its rivalsByMike MurphyPublishedAugust 14, 2015
Hackers take down New York magazine’s website after its explosive Bill Cosby storyByKeith Collins and Zachary M. SewardPublishedJuly 27, 2015
Here’s what your stolen identity goes for on the internet’s black marketByKeith CollinsPublishedJuly 23, 2015
A cyber attack struck messaging app Telegram just as China was cracking down on human rights lawyersByJosh HorwitzPublishedJuly 13, 2015
The personal data of four million US government workers may now be in the hands of Chinese hackersByLily KuoPublishedJune 5, 2015
Hackers have been using the Starbucks app to steal money from latte drinkersByAdam PasickPublishedMay 14, 2015