The world is fighting a hidden war thanks to a massive shift in the technologies countries can use to attack each other. Much like the Cold War, the conflict is being fought indirectly rather than through open declarations of hostility.
The Chinese regime may be using cyberattacks against the US as a model for attacks elsewhere.
CSIS former Asia-Pacific bureau chief Michel Juneau-Katsuya says warnings about agents of influence in Canada shouldn’t be taken lightly.
Being a spy is lonely, even if your teenage daughter thinks it’s pretty cool, which Brian O’Shea’s does.
CEOs and business leaders often ignore cyber intrusions or even cover them up, allege IT experts who attended an espionage conference near Ottawa this week.
Mysterious files were found on two models of Sony Xperia smartphones which researchers found are relaying data to Chinese servers.
Who’s in your network, checking out your data? The latest invasive digital creature is Sandworm, a piece of malware discovered to be using a previously unknown Windows vulnerability to infiltrate government networks, spying on systems at NATO, the European Union, the Ukrainian government and others.
The world is fighting a hidden war thanks to a massive shift in the technologies countries can use to attack each other. Much like the Cold War, the conflict is being fought indirectly rather than through open declarations of hostility.
The Chinese regime may be using cyberattacks against the US as a model for attacks elsewhere.
CSIS former Asia-Pacific bureau chief Michel Juneau-Katsuya says warnings about agents of influence in Canada shouldn’t be taken lightly.
Being a spy is lonely, even if your teenage daughter thinks it’s pretty cool, which Brian O’Shea’s does.
CEOs and business leaders often ignore cyber intrusions or even cover them up, allege IT experts who attended an espionage conference near Ottawa this week.
Mysterious files were found on two models of Sony Xperia smartphones which researchers found are relaying data to Chinese servers.
Who’s in your network, checking out your data? The latest invasive digital creature is Sandworm, a piece of malware discovered to be using a previously unknown Windows vulnerability to infiltrate government networks, spying on systems at NATO, the European Union, the Ukrainian government and others.