While software can sync files and folders for you, it's often limited in scope. Learn how a PowerShell script can help you ...
Crooks tweak familiar copy-paste ruse so that victims run malicious commands themselves A new twist on the long-running ...
Unwitting victims are now being tricked into installing malware via Windows Terminal, but some experts say this is old news.
Hackers have a new tool called ClickFix. The new attack vector combines fake human-verification prompts with malware, trying to trick users into running Terminal commands that bypass macOS security.
The state-sponsored hackers deployed custom tools and stayed dormant in the compromised environments for months.
Signed malware backed by a stolen EV certificate deployed legitimate RMM tools to gain persistent access inside enterprise ...
Iran-linked Dust Specter targeted Iraqi officials using fake ministry lures and new malware families uncovered by Zscaler.
Recent social engineering schemes involving WordPress and Microsoft’s Windows Terminal show that this relatively basic tactic is a growing threat.
A fake $TEMU crypto airdrop uses the ClickFix trick to make victims run malware themselves and quietly installs a remote-access backdoor.
North Korean hackers are deploying newly uncovered tools to move data between internet-connected and air-gapped systems, spread via removable drives, and conduct covert surveillance.
Using an AI coding assistant to migrate an application from one programming language to another wasn’t as easy as it looked. Here are three takeaways.