A fake computer alert can be the first move in a scam that ends with someone moving their own retirement money out of reach.
Hackers are using this insidious scam to get unwitting victims to install malware themselves.
The FBI warns that the Silent Ransom Group is targeting law firms by posing as IT support workers, even showing up in person ...
The scam preys on muscle memory. People are used to clicking through CAPTCHAs quickly, and hackers are turning that routine ...
You've seen CAPTCHA checks everywhere. You click a box. You move on. No big deal. Now imagine that same box asking you to press a few keys on your keyboard. It might tell you to open a command window ...
Cybercriminals are increasingly using fake CAPTCHA prompts to trick users into enabling malware and scam notifications. Security experts warn the tactic is spreading rapidly through ads, pirated ...
From account hijacks and convincing scams to surveillance systems and experimental malware, AI was behind some of this week's ...
Hackers don’t need a copy of your fingerprint to target you for attacks. Meanwhile, other types of attacks, such as voice ...
An 88-year-old Sioux Falls man lost $40,000 after a computer warning turned into a bank-hacking scare, according to local ...