The British telecom company, which suffered a cyberattack that could cost it $53 million, is offering customers a free upgrade.
Watch out for this malware by avoiding phishing emails or by backing up your hard drive.
While Denmark's intelligence service doubts Russia has plans for a military confrontation with Copenhagen or NATO, it still listed the Kremlin in its latest national security risk assessment.
More than 10,000 people received the email, intended to test employees' phishing awareness.
The British broadband provider has hired BAE Systems to look into Friday’s attack.
Attacks by hackers holding access to computers for ransom are typically traced back to Russia or Eastern Europe, where technical skills are in heavy supply, but jobs aren't.
The British telecom company has suffered its third and most significant breach in the last 12 months, with 4 million customer records stolen.
Code-sharing website GitHub is investigating a cyberattack against the website.
A new report on cybersecurity says 26.6 percent of all malware attacks in 2015 were aimed at healthcare sites.
Criminals in France figured out how to dupe the PIN verification on chip-and-PIN credit cards being rolled out in the U.S., researchers said.
According to a report by American cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike, U.S. companies have continued to face repeated, albeit unsuccessful, intrusions from Chinese hackers.
The breach is believed to have been the work of hackers with connections to Russia.
The Philippines and Vietnam remain vulnerable to Chinese cyberattacks, as the smaller nations challenge China's claims in the South China Sea.
Kosovo national Ardit Feriz allegedly hacked into U.S. security data and provided information about military and federal employees to the Islamic State group in Syria.
Privacy activists and major tech firms are typically at odds, but they both oppose a Senate proposal called the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act.
While Russian hackers have long been a problem for Western countries, attacks have been far more aggressive since NATO and Russia recommenced hostilities in Ukraine and Syria.
A piece of malware spread by an Eastern European hacking group called Evil Corp has stolen at least $40 million from businesses in the U.S. and the U.K.
Becoming the largest piracy site in the world comes with a price.
It's possible that the listings are fake.
A new report warned that an increase in reliance on digital systems had left nuclear facilities across the globe exposed to cyberattacks.
The Social Security numbers of 15 million T-Mobile credit applicants were stolen through a partner company.
Two of the Internet's largest pornography websites were found to be serving up advertisements that included malware.