Are online banks safe? Short answer: yes. Online banks take numerous precautions every day to keep your money safe, from advanced cybersecurity technology to the latest user authentication methods.
Google on Friday unveiled its plan for its Chrome browser to secure HTTPS certificates against quantum computer attacks without breaking the Internet.
The natural response to such an alarming lack of privacy is to put up walls, retreat into a shell and try to become anonymous ...
It's hard to imagine a time when Minecraft, a sandbox game that now features crossover content with Star Wars and Hello Kitty, or offers 'happy Ghasts' as a mob, was scary. I remember back when I was ...
FiCare Federal Credit Union is suing Fiserv, alleging the company failed to secure its online banking platform. The lawsuit claims Fiserv is attempting to charge extra for security measures that ...
Warning: This graphic requires JavaScript. Please enable JavaScript for the best experience. The browser wars are back — and this time they’re supercharged by ...
NEW YORK, Jan. 22, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Software Experts has published a new article examining how virtual private networks are being used to support secure browsing and online privacy. The review ...
Browser security is far from perfect, but technologists and cybersecurity researchers have built a security model that, for the most part, works. However, artificial intelligence (AI) agents could be ...
CrowdStrike has agreed to acquire Israel-based Seraphic Security, a browser runtime security company, to extend its Falcon platform to browser-native enterprise security. Expected to close by April, ...
CrowdStrike acquired Israeli browser protection firm Seraphic Security. Financial details of the deal were not disclosed, but sources placed the figure at around $420 million. Formed in 2020 by CEO ...
CrowdStrike (CRWD) will fuse Seraphic’s continuous in-session browser protection with SGNL’s continuous identity to secure every interaction from the endpoint to the browser to the cloud By ...
If you’re running the iOS 26.3 beta, Apple has just released a new security update you can install. But there’s a catch: rather than including fixes, the update is simply testing out a new system.