OpenAI’s Sam Altman discusses GPT-5 release date
ChatGPT’s next big upgrade, or the new foundational model “GPT-5,” is still being prepared for a release in the summer, but OpenAI won’t share the specifics. […]
ChatGPT’s next big upgrade, or the new foundational model “GPT-5,” is still being prepared for a release in the summer, but OpenAI won’t share the specifics. […]
The U.S. Department of Justice has seized more than $225 million in cryptocurrency linked to investment fraud and money laundering operations, the largest crypto seizure in the history of the U.S. Secret Service. […]
Researchers uncover a watering hole attack likely carried out by APT TA423, which attempts to plant the ScanBox JavaScript-based reconnaissance tool.
2.5 million people were affected, in a breach that could spell more trouble down the line.
Tens of thousands of cameras have failed to patch a critical, 11-month-old CVE, leaving thousands of organizations exposed.
Lockbit is by far this summer’s most prolific ransomware group, trailed by two offshoots of the Conti group.
Over 130 companies tangled in sprawling phishing campaign that spoofed a multi-factor authentication system.
Late last year, security researchers made a startling discovery: Kremlin-backed disinformation campaigns were bypassing moderation on social media platforms by leveraging the same malicious advertising technology that powers a sprawling ecosystem of online hucksters and website hackers. A new report on the fallout from that investigation finds this dark ad tech industry is far more
Microsoft today released security updates to fix at least 67 vulnerabilities in its Windows operating systems and software. Redmond warns that one of the flaws is already under active attack, and that software blueprints showing how to exploit a pervasive Windows bug patched this month are now public. The sole zero-day flaw this month is
Authorities in Pakistan have arrested 21 individuals accused of operating “Heartsender,” a once popular spam and malware dissemination service that operated for more than a decade. The main clientele for HeartSender were organized crime groups that tried to trick victim companies into making payments to a third party, and its alleged proprietors were publicly identified