A 271,000-word WhatsApp conversation between a Bay Area man and his scammer reveals the heartbreaking mechanics of a new breed of investment racket. Experts believe the global losses are in the billions.
The headlines around the NFT market are filled with doom and gloom, but for certain blue chip collections like Bored Ape Yacht Club, demand has not completely collapsed.
A group of cyber security experts is calling on the UK government to reform the Computer Misuse Act, saying it fails to protect security professionals.
An Israeli facial recognition company shows Forbes how its tech is being used at casinos to identify those on a watch list. Critics fear what will happen now that private entities across the world are being given powerful surveillance tools.
Oosto, formerly known as AnyVision, is an Israeli facial recognition company that faced controversy when their technology was used by the Israeli military to surveil Palestinians. Now they've moved to the private sector, specifically in casinos.
A new report from OnSolve examines how the Covid pandemic, Climate Change, geopolitical tension, and other factors have a butterfly effect that can disrupt seemingly unrelated businesses around the world.
Sextortion, in which explicit imagery of victims is used to blackmail them, is spiking across America, much of it targeting teenage boys on Instagram and Snapchat.
In a display of even-handedness, Facebook and Twitter have taken down a series of accounts that have for five years been engaging in pro-Western propaganda.
The company formerly known as Square is facing a class action in which the Twitter cofounder’s business is accused of being “negligent.” It comes as a former Twitter security exec dropped bombshell allegations about the ways in which it handles data.
Apple said the flaws could let hackers take complete control of a wide range of devices—including iPhones, iPads and Mac computers—and it has received credible reports that the vulnerabilities had been “actively exploited.”