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A New Lawsuit Accuses Meta of Inflaming Civil War in Ethiopia

By Vittoria Elliott, Dell Cameron
The suit claims the company lacks adequate moderation to prevent widespread hate speech that has led to violence and death.

Cuba Ransomware Gang Abused Microsoft Certificates to Sign Malware

By Lily Hay Newman
The company has taken measures to mitigate the risks, but security researchers warn of a broader threat.

Hackers Planted Files to Frame Indian Priest Who Died in Custody

By Andy Greenberg
And new evidence suggests those hackers may have collaborated with the police who investigated him.

Why the US Is Primed for Radicalization

By Thor Benson
A confluence of factors is leading people in the nation to gravitate toward extremist views.

Attackers Keep Targeting the US Electric Grid

By Andy Greenberg
Plus: Chinese hackers stealing US Covid relief funds, a cyberattack on the Met Opera website, and more.

Log4j’s Log4Shell Vulnerability: One Year Later, It’s Still Lurking

By Lily Hay Newman
Despite mitigation, one of the worst bugs in internet history is still prevalent—and being exploited.

Lensa AI and ‘Magic Avatars’: What to Know Before Using the App

By Reece Rogers
Are you thinking about uploading some selfies and buying a pack of ‘Magic Avatars’? Consider these expert tips first.

Popular HR and Payroll Company Sequoia Discloses a Data Breach

By Lily Hay Newman
The company, which works with hundreds of startups, said it detected unauthorized access to personal data, including Social Security numbers.

Elon Musk’s Twitter Files Are a Feast for Conspiracy Theorists

By Justin Ling
From QAnon influencers to @catturd, the very online right sees exactly what they want to see in the CEO’s orchestrated disclosure.

Apple Kills Its Plan to Scan Your Photos for CSAM. Here’s What’s Next

By Lily Hay Newman
The company plans to expand its Communication Safety features, which aim to disrupt the sharing of child sexual abuse material at the source.

Apple Expands End-to-End Encryption to iCloud Backups

By Lily Hay Newman
The company will also soon support the use of physical authentication keys with Apple ID, and is adding contact verification for iMessage in 2023.

Scammers Are Scamming Other Scammers Out of Millions of Dollars

By Matt Burgess
On cybercrime forums, user complaints about being duped may accidentally expose their real identities.

The Dangerous Digital Creep of Britain's ‘Hostile Environment’

By Sanjana Varghese
The UK's use of technology to enforce its hard-line immigration policy brings the border into every facet of migrants' lives.

China’s Police State Targets Zero-Covid Protesters

By Dhruv Mehrotra
Plus: ICE accidentally doxes asylum seekers, Google fails to uphold a post-Roe promise, and LastPass suffers the second breach this year.

Android Phone Makers’ Encryption Keys Stolen and Used in Malware

By Lily Hay Newman
Device manufacturers use “platform certificates” to verify an app’s authenticity, making them particularly dangerous in the wrong hands.

Iran’s Protests Reveal What’s Lost If Twitter Crumbles

By Matt Burgess
As authorities hit citizens with more violence, the social network is proving key to documenting abuses. If it breaks, a human rights lifeline may disappear.

Google Moves to Block Invasive Spanish Spyware Framework

By Lily Hay Newman
The Heliconia hacking tool exploited vulnerabilities in Chrome, Windows Defender, and Firefox, according to company security researchers.

Drop What You're Doing and Update iOS, Android, and Windows

By Kate O'Flaherty
Plus: Major patches dropped this month for Chrome, Firefox, VMware, Cisco, Citrix, and SAP.

The Hunt for the Kingpin Behind AlphaBay, Part 6: Endgame

By Andy Greenberg
With AlphaBay shuttered, Operation Bayonet enters its final phase: driving the site’s refugees into a giant trap. But one refugee hatched his own plan.

A Peek Inside the FBI's Unprecedented January 6 Geofence Dragnet

By Mark Harris
Google provided investigators with location data for more than 5,000 devices as part of the federal investigation into the attack on the US Capitol.

Apple Tracks You More Than You Think

By Matt Burgess
Plus: WikiLeaks’ website is falling apart, tax websites are sending your data to Facebook, and cops take down a big phone-number-spoofing operation.

Redacted Documents Are Not as Secure as You Think

By Matt Burgess
Popular redaction tools don’t always work as promised, and new attacks can reveal hidden information, researchers say.

I Lost $17,000 in Crypto. Here’s How to Avoid My Mistake

By Alexander Webb
I’m not the first person to suffer this fate, but hopefully I can be the last.

How to Avoid Black Friday Scams Online

By David Nield
'Tis the season for swindlers and hackers. Use these tips to spot frauds and keep your payment info secure.

The US Has a Bomb-Sniffing Dog Shortage

By Lily Hay Newman
Finding high-quality detection canines is hard enough—and the pandemic only dug a deeper hole.

The Hunt for the Dark Web’s Biggest Kingpin, Part 5: Takedown

By Andy Greenberg
After months of meticulous planning, investigators finally move in to catch AlphaBay’s mastermind red-handed. Then the case takes a tragic turn.

Autonomous Vehicles Join the List of US National Security Threats

By Justin Ling
Lawmakers are growing concerned about a flood of data-hungry cars from China taking over American streets.

A Leak Details Apple's Secret Dirt on Corellium, a Trusted Security Startup

By Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai
A 500-page document reviewed by WIRED shows that Corellium engaged with several controversial companies, including spyware maker NSO Group.

A Destabilizing Hack-and-Leak Operation Hits Moldova

By Lily Hay Newman
Plus: Google’s location snooping ends in a $391 million settlement, Russian code sneaks into US government apps, and the World Cup apps set off alarms.

Here’s How Bad a Twitter Mega-Breach Would Be

By Lily Hay Newman
Elon Musk laid off half the staff, and mass resignations seem likely. If nobody’s there to protect the fort, what’s the worst that could happen?

Telehealth Sites Put Addiction Patient Data at Risk

By Lindsey Ellefson
New research found pervasive use of tracking tech on substance-abuse-focused health care websites, potentially endangering users in a post-Roe world.

The Hunt for the Dark Web’s Biggest Kingpin, Part 4: Face to Face

By Andy Greenberg
The team uses a secret technique to locate AlphaBay’s server. But just as the operation heats up, the agents have an unexpected run-in with their target.

Twitter’s SMS Two-Factor Authentication Is Melting Down

By Lily Hay Newman
Problems with the important security feature may be some of the first signs that Elon Musk’s social network is fraying at the edges.

The Hunt for the FTX Thieves Has Begun

By Andy Greenberg
Mysterious crooks took hundreds of millions of dollars from FTX just as it collapsed. Crypto-tracing blockchain analysis may provide an answer.

Elon Musk Introduces Twitter Mayhem Mode

By Dhruv Mehrotra
Plus: US midterms survive disinformation efforts, the government names the alleged Lockbit ransomware attacker, and the Powerball drawing hits a security snag.

‘Dark Ships’ Emerge From the Shadows of the Nord Stream Mystery

By Matt Burgess
Satellite monitors discovered two vessels with their trackers turned off in the area of the pipeline prior to the suspected sabotage in September.

Russia’s Sway Over Criminal Ransomware Gangs Is Coming Into Focus

By Lily Hay Newman
Questions about the Kremlin’s relationships with these groups remain. But researchers are finally getting some answers.

Elon Musk's Twitter Blue Verification Is a Gift to Scammers

By Matt Burgess
Anyone can get a blue tick on Twitter without proving who they are. And it’s already causing a ton of problems.

Russia’s New Cyberwarfare in Ukraine Is Fast, Dirty, and Relentless

By Andy Greenberg
Security researchers see updated tactics and tools—and a tempo change—in the cyberattacks Russia’s GRU military intelligence agency is inflicting on Ukraine.

How to Use Apple Pay or Google Wallet Instead of Plastic Cards

By Reece Rogers
Cash is safe—for now. Contactless payment methods, like Apple Pay or Google Wallet, are more of a threat to the existence of physical cards.

Inside the ‘Election Integrity App’ Built to Purge US Voter Rolls

By Dhruv Mehrotra
True the Vote’s IV3 app is meant to catch election cheaters. But it has a fundamental flaw.

The Secret Ballot Is US Democracy’s Last Line of Defense

By Lily Hay Newman
Voter intimidation has cropped up in places across the nation, but the voting booth remains the one place where nobody can get to you.

IRS Seizes Another Silk Road Hacker’s $3.36 Billion Bitcoin Stash

By Andy Greenberg
A year after a billion-dollar seizure of the dark web market's crypto, the same agency found a giant trove hidden under a different hacker's floorboards.

Twitter’s Ex-Election Chief Is Worried About the US Midterms

By Chris Stokel-Walker
Edward Perez says that “manufactured chaos” by bad actors will be even riskier thanks to Elon Musk’s own mayhem.

TikTok Admits Staff in China Can Access Europeans’ Data

By Lily Hay Newman, Andrew Couts
Plus: Liz Truss’ phone-hacking trouble, Cash App’s sex-trafficking problem, and the rising cost of ransomware.

Soccer Fans, You're Being Watched

By Vas Panagiotopoulos
Stadiums around the world, including at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, are subjecting spectators to invasive biometric surveillance tech.

The Rise of Rust, the ‘Viral’ Secure Programming Language That’s Taking Over Tech

By Lily Hay Newman
Rust makes it impossible to introduce some of the most common security vulnerabilities. And its adoption can’t come soon enough.

The Most Vulnerable Place on the Internet

By Matt Burgess
Underwater cables keep the internet online. When they congregate in one place, things get tricky.

When Your Neighbor Turns You In

By Thor Benson
Authoritarian societies depend on people ratting each other out for activities that were recently legal—and it's already happening in the US.

You Need to Update Google Chrome, Windows, and Zoom Right Now

By Kate O'Flaherty
Plus: Important patches from Apple, VMWare, Cisco, Zimbra, SAP, and Oracle.

The Election That Saved the Internet From Russia and China

By Justin Ling
Open-internet advocates are breathing a sigh of relief after a recent election for the International Telecommunications Union's top leadership.

China Operates Secret ‘Police Stations’ in Other Countries

By Matt Burgess
Plus: The New York Post gets hacked, a huge stalkerware network is exposed, and the US claims China interfered with its Huawei probe.

If Musk Starts Firing Twitter's Security Team, Run

By Lily Hay Newman
What's next for the social network is anyone's guess—but here's what to watch as you wade through the privacy and security morass.

Apple MacOS Ventura Bug Breaks Third-Party Security Tools

By Lily Hay Newman
Your anti-malware software may not work if you upgraded to the new operating system. But Apple says a fix is on the way.

A Pro-China Disinfo Campaign Is Targeting US Elections—Badly

By Andy Greenberg
The suspected Chinese influence operation had limited success. But it signals a growing threat from a new disinformation adversary.

The Hunt for the Kingpin Behind AlphaBay, Part 1: The Shadow

By Andy Greenberg
AlphaBay was the largest online drug bazaar in history, run by a technological mastermind who seemed untouchable—until his tech was turned against him.

Hot on the Trail of a Mass-School-Shooting Hoaxer

By Dhruv Mehrotra
For months, an anonymous caller has terrorized communities around the US by reporting false shooting threats. We know how they did it. The question is, why?

The Quiet Insurrection the January 6 Committee Missed

By Matt Laslo
A former congressman who helped the House select committee investigate the Capitol attack says the US is losing sight of the big picture.

TikTok’s Security Threat Comes Into Focus

By Lily Hay Newman
Plus: A Microsoft cloud leak exposed potential customers, new IoT security labels come to the US, and details emerge about Trump’s document stash.

Your Microsoft Exchange Server Is a Security Liability

By Andy Greenberg
Endless vulnerabilities. Massive hacking campaigns. Slow and technically tough patching. It's time to say goodbye to on-premise Exchange.
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