The hackers who infiltrated Sony Pictures Entertainment's computer servers have threatened to attack an American news media organization, according to an FBI bulletin obtained by The Intercept.
Security researcher and former cybersecurity reporter Brian Krebs says he knows exactly who may be behind the massive attacks that took down both Sony's PlayStation Network and Microsoft's Xbox Live platform for two straight days.
US and British intelligence agencies undertake every effort imaginable to crack all types of encrypted Internet communication. The cloud is full of holes. New Snowden documents show that some forms of encryption still cause problems for the NSA.
A SWAT team raided Jonathan Whitworth's home looking for what they believed was a "large amount of marijuana." After breaking into his home, terrorizing his wife and child, they shot his two dogs, killing one of them.
December 25th has been quite an eventful day for gamers. Many new Xbox One and PlayStation 4 owners unwrapped their new devices, only to find out they couldn't play online -- both Xbox Live and the PlayStation Network was down all day long thanks to
The post-Snowden world is a different place. While the NSA and its allied spy agencies still have very little accountability, and while their leaders can still lie to Congress without consequence, they're no longer operating in the dark.
The "hackers" did this leak physically at a Sony LAN workstation by downloading the material in much the same way Bradley Manning or Edward Snowden did at their respective posts.
North Korea's negligible Internet connectivity appears to have faltered. First spotted by Dyn Research, North Korean routers have been inaccessible, and its scant IP allocation--just 1024 addresses--appears to be offline.
About 1.2 million customer payment cards information is expected to have exposed to the hackers during the security breach earlier this year, Staples Inc. said on Friday.
Sony Entertainment's lawyer said on Meet The Press Sunday that the company will find a way to release "The Interview" after it decided not to premiere the film in theaters on Christmas Day.
Sony has made headlines with its decision to halt its planned release of "The Interview" over fears that hackers, who may or may not be North Korea-linked, might launch 9/11 attacks on movie theaters.
The hackers behind a devastating cyberattack at Sony Pictures have sent a new message to executives at the company, crediting them for a "very wise" decision to cancel the Christmas day release of "The Interview," a source close to the company told C
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