Bank impostor scams cost Americans $2.9 billion as criminals use AI voices and caller ID spoofing to steal life savings.
The alleged hackers are speaking out about their motives, community members are taking legal action and a cybersecurity expert offers advice on what to do now.
Cormican closed his landscaping business, invested in cutting-edge sonar equipment, and bought a boat. In the years since, he ...
Neighbors complained about noise, security guards, and hordes of traffic. An unlicensed school named after the Zuckerbergs’ ...
YesLawyer has connected nearly 15,000 clients with legal counsel across all 50 states. The company’s expansion reflects a ...
Across those two apps alone, storage costs add up to $50 a year for the lowest tiers and roughly $1,284 for the highest – ...
In a wrongful death lawsuit filed on Thursday in California state court in San Francisco, they say that ChatGPT worsened their son’s isolation by repeatedly encouraging him to ignore his family even ...
President Trump’s call to resume nuclear tests was muddied this week when Energy Secretary Chris Wright said the United States would not resume explosive testing, which was last conducted in the ...
Government analysts and private sector investigators were able to rapidly attribute to Iranian hackers a wave of thousands of ...
China enlisted surveillance firms to help draw up standards for mass facial recognition systems, researchers said on Tuesday, ...
Travel advice has changed a ton in the past 20 years. Those massive guidebooks turned into apps you barely opened. Paper maps ...