Google found a series of hacking tools they said were used by a Russian espionage group and a cybercriminal group in China.
A highly sophisticated set of iPhone hijacking techniques has likely infected tens of thousands of phones or more. Clues suggest it was originally built for the US government.
Leaked iPhone hacking toolkit linked to U.S. contractor L3Harris fueled Russian and Chinese cyberattacks, exposing global users to espionage and theft.
The post US Government Hacking Tools Are Now in Criminal Hands: Is Your iPhone Safe? appeared first on Android Headlines.
A prominent journalist in Angola was targeted by a government-grade spyware in the first known case of its kind in the southern African nation, researchers have found. Teixeira Cândido’s iPhone was ...
A government customer of sanctioned spyware maker Intellexa hacked the phone of a prominent journalist in Angola, according to Amnesty International, the latest case of targeting someone in civil ...
Fourteen years after the last titles in the .hack series, CyberConnect2 is celebrating the studio's 30th anniversary by unveiling .hack//Z.E.R.O., also known as "Project Dusk." With no release date ...
Morning Overview on MSN
US government iPhone hacking tool leaks into criminal hands
A former general manager at a U.S. defense contractor has pleaded guilty to selling stolen trade secrets to a Russian broker, ...
The Fulu Foundation, a nonprofit that pays out bounties for removing user-hostile features, is hunting for a way to keep Ring cameras from sending data to Amazon—without breaking the hardware. The ad ...
iOS 26.4 beta 1 debuted yesterday, packing a wide array of new features, including a change for personal hotspot that makes it easy to see who’s using your data. Until I went all-in on cellular iPads ...
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