vulnerabilitiesSecurityMeltdown and Spectre Fixes Arrive—But Don't Solve EverythingBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityWhite House Staff Can't Use Personal Smartphones AnymoreBy Brian BarrettSecurityA Critical Intel Flaw Breaks Basic Security for Most PCsBy Andy GreenbergSecurityHold North Korea Accountable for WannaCry—and the NSA, TooBy Andy GreenbergSecurityMacOS Update Accidentally Undoes Apple's "Root" Bug PatchBy Andy GreenbergSecurityIntel Chip Flaws Leave Millions of Devices ExposedBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityFeds Explain Their Hacking Stash—But Don’t Erase ConcernsBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityA Bug in a Popular Maritime Platform Left Ships ExposedBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityEquifax Deserves the Corporate Death PenaltyBy Ron FeinSecurityThe Flawed System Behind the Krack Wi-Fi MeltdownBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityThe 'Secure' Wi-Fi Standard Has a Huge, Dangerous FlawBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityEquifax Officially Has No ExcuseBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityHey, Turn Bluetooth Off When You're Not Using ItBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityWhy the US Shouldn't Ban Kaspersky Security SoftwareBy Philip Chertoff SecurityHow a Bug in an Obscure Chip Exposed a Billion Smartphones to HackersBy Andy GreenbergSecurityBugs in Popular Hacker Tools Open the Door to Striking BackBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityWhy Governments Won't Let Go of Secret Software BugsBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityA Vicious Microsoft Bug Left a Billion PCs ExposedBy Brian BarrettSecurityHack Brief: Intel Fixes a Critical Bug That Lingered for 7 Dang YearsBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityAn Obscure App Flaw Creates Backdoors In Millions of SmartphonesBy Andy GreenbergSecurityRussian Hackers Have Used the Same Backdoor for Two DecadesBy Andy GreenbergSecuritySecurity News This Week: Yes, Even Internet-Connected Dishwashers Can Get HackedBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityThe Clever 'DoubleAgent' Attack Turns Antivirus Into MalwareBy Lily Hay NewmanBusinessThe CIA Leak Exposes Tech’s Vulnerable FutureBy Jason TanzMore Stories