The hacking group, Handala, is claiming to have erased data from over 200,000 devices, including servers and mobile phones used by employees of Stryker, a medical equipment provider.
Amid a paralyzing breach of medical tech firm Stryker, the group has come to represent Iran's use of “hacktivism” as cover for chaotic, retaliatory state-sponsored cyberattacks.
Salt Typhoon is by far one of the most prolific hacking groups in recent years, breaching some of the top American phone ...
Hackers supporting Iran claimed responsibility for a significant cyberattack Wednesday against U.S. medical device company ...
New research shows hundreds of attempts by apparent Iranian state hackers to hijack consumer-grade cameras, timed to missile ...
Security researchers say exploits used by governments to hack into Apple iPhones have been found used by cybercriminals. They ...
It should come as no surprise that the hacker community has embraced the Meshtastic project. It’s got a little bit of everything we hold dear: high quality open source software, fantastic ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Davey Winder is a veteran cybersecurity writer, hacker and analyst. Actually, let’s start with a slightly different question, ...
A hacker has pulled off one of the most alarming AI-powered cyberattacks ever documented. According to Anthropic, the company behind Claude, a hacker used its artificial intelligence chatbot to ...
When you think of cyberattacks that compromise your account security, maybe you envisage Microsoft zero-day vulnerabilities being exploited in your software, or perhaps a hacker using ...
Cybersecurity executive Chaim Mazal says joining a hacker community as a kid helped jump-start his career.