vulnerabilitiesSecurityATM Hackers Have Picked Up Some Clever New TricksBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityAn Alexa Bug Could Have Exposed Your Voice History to HackersBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityOver a Billion Android Devices Are at Risk of Data TheftBy Dan Goodin, Ars TechnicaSecurityFlaws Could Have Exposed Cryptocurrency Exchanges to HackersBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityAn ’80s File Format Enabled Stealthy Mac HackingBy Andy GreenbergSecurityThe Garmin Hack Was a WarningBy Brian BarrettSecurityApple’s Hackable iPhones Are Finally HereBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityThe Anatomy of a Cisco Fake Shows Its Dangerous PotentialBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityMicrosoft Warns of a 17-Year-Old ‘Wormable’ BugBy Andy GreenbergSecurityHackers Are Exploiting a 5-Alarm Bug in Networking EquipmentBy Andy GreenbergSecurityA Legion of Bugs Puts Hundreds of Millions of Devices at RiskBy Andy GreenbergSecurityResearchers Expose a New Vulnerability in Intel's CPUsBy Dan Goodin, Ars TechnicaSecurityThis Bot Hunts Software Bugs for the PentagonBy Tom SimoniteSecurityCryptocurrency Hardware Wallets Can Get Hacked TooBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityThunderbolt Flaws Expose Millions of PCs to Hands-On HacksBy Andy GreenbergSecurityZoom Security Gets a Boost With Keybase AcquisitionBy Brian BarrettSecuritySpies Say Covid-19 Isn't ManmadeBy Brian BarrettSecurityThe Covid-19 Pandemic Reveals Ransomware's Long GameBy Lily Hay NewmanSecuritySneaky Zero-Click Attacks Are a Hidden MenaceBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityRussian Hackers Went After San Francisco's AirportBy Brian BarrettSecurityA Cheap 3D Printer Can Trick Smartphone Fingerprint LocksBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityA Notorious Spyware Vendor Wants to Track Covid-19 SpreadBy Brian BarrettSecurityA Hacker Found a Way to Take Over Any Apple WebcamBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityThe Zoom Privacy Backlash Is Only Getting StartedBy Lily Hay NewmanMore Stories