October 14, 2022
Death to passwords: Beta passkey support comes to Chrome and Android
Big Tech's cross-platform password replacement arrives in the Google ecosystem.
July 27, 2023 | General, Defence and Security
Mandiant research has attributed the hack to UNC4899, a Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) threat actor, with a history of targeting companies within the cryptocurrency vertical.
October 14, 2022
Big Tech's cross-platform password replacement arrives in the Google ecosystem.
February 14, 2023
« Les agences en question estiment qu’un montant indéterminé de revenus provenant de ces opérations en crypto-monnaie soutient les priorités et les objectifs nationaux de la RPDC (République populaire démocratique de Corée), y compris les cyberopérations ciblant les gouvernements des États-Unis et de la Corée du Sud »
May 16, 2023
In 2022 alone, a total of 4,100 publicly disclosed data breaches occurred, comprising some 22 billion records that were exposed. All this despite the fact that organizations around the world spent a record-breaking $150 billion on cybersecurity in 2021. Software itself is changing, too. The rise of artificial intelligence in general, and generative AI in particular, is fundamentally altering the way companies use software. The increasing use of AI is, in turn, making software?s attack surfaces more complicated and software itself more vulnerable. How, then, should companies go about securing their software and data? What companies aim to achieve from their security programs must evolve, just as the way that companies? use of data and software has evolved. It is past time for their cybersecurity efforts to change. This article covers three such changes that companies can make to adapt to the growing insecurities of the digital world.