Numerous enterprise VPN clients could be vulnerable to a potentially serious security weakness that could be used to spoof access.
Monthly Archives: April 2019
Flood of exploits targetting ancient WinRAR flaw continues
An ancient WinRAR vulnerability made public in February is now well on its way to becoming one of the most widely and rapidly-exploited security flaws of recent times.
Microsoft’s Edge browser reborn after Chromium makeover
After three years of embarrassing rejection, might Microsoft’s newly-Chromed Edge browser be on the up?
Is there a link between videogaming and cybercrime? Police think so
UK police are planning to issue online warnings to young gamers hoping to deter them from a life of cybercrime, they revealed last week.
Dragonblood: Data-leaking flaw in WPA3 Wi-Fi authentication
Researchers have discovered several holes in a new security protocol for wireless networks.
Facebook admits “supply chain data leak” in new Oculus headsets
One week out from Easter, and Facebook’s Oculus subsidiary has admitted a “hidden message Easter Egg” gone wrong. Coincidence, or…
Can you detect hidden cameras in hotel rooms? [VIDEO]
Naked Security Live investigates how to sniff out snoopy spycams. We explain what works, and what doesn’t, when it comes to hidden cameras.
Assange arrested, faces extradition for hacking
The Ecuadorean embassy finally decided it wasn’t willing to shelter Julian Assange any more, so it let in UK police to arrest him.
Feds say Russian 2016 election meddling spanned all US states
A multi-agency report has strengthened claims that Russia meddled with election systems in all 50 US states during the last presidential race.
Flickr tackling online image theft with new AI service
Photo sharing website Flickr is trying to combat copyright infringement with a service that spots copies of its users’ images online.
