The future of crime?
Welcome to the future of crime: high volume, low margin.
It was one of the issues which overshadowed the US elections: the hacking of the Democratic National Committee and the subsequent CIA investigation. Now Channel 4 News has learnt that the same Russian group behind that cyber attack has also been hitting targets here in the UK.
Channel 4 News has seen evidence which appears to link Russian hackers with one of the main websites used to leak emails stolen from the Democratic National Committee.
Welcome to the future of crime: high volume, low margin.
Businesses allegedly connected with Craig Wright are still pursuing patent claims around the technology that created Bitcoin.
News that an NHS Trust has shared the information of 1.6m patients with a service run by Google has raised concerns about how health data is being treated.
Indian police have arrested three employees of a sub-contractor of TalkTalk, who are accused of stealing customers’ data and using it to con them out of thousands.
What would you do for £300m? That’s the current worth of the Bitcoin stash allegedly due to Dr Wright.
A Channel 4 News investigation has identified two of the people behind the scamming of British customers of the telecoms giant TalkTalk.
I’ve been covering cyber security for several years, but very, very rarely come across incidents that directly resulted in physical harm, let alone death.
It was one of the biggest hacks in recent history – more than a million people’s sensitive data stolen and tonight – we’ve got inside information about how it could have been carried out.
Safe Harbor – as the spelling suggests, it’s a US-focused invention. But what on earth is it, and why does today’s European Court of Justice decision on it matter?
Most tech companies have a laser-like focus one goal: growing customer numbers. Complying with requests from foreign law enforcement agencies is not a priority
For a platform like Facebook, that is built largely on advertising money, a “dislike” button would be a brave move indeed.
Doctors, secondary school teachers and charity workers are among the paying customers of infidelity dating website Ashley Madison now at serious risk of blackmail after the site was hacked.
A Channel 4 News investigation exposes the scam artists using .gov.uk web pages to sell unlicensed drugs and counterfeit Rolex watches.