Over 260,000 users installed fake AI Chrome extensions that used iframe injection to steal browser and Gmail data, exposing ...
That initial tool, called Jmail, allows users to wade through Epstein’s seemingly endless email correspondence in a Gmail-style interface. To build it, Walz and Igel used Google’s Gemini AI to run ...
Threat actors are abusing Pastebin comments to distribute a new ClickFix-style attack that tricks cryptocurrency users into ...
A database left accessible to anyone online contained billions of records, including sensitive personal data that criminals ...
Dropbox engineers have detailed how the company built the context engine behind Dropbox Dash, revealing a shift toward ...
Two dozen journalists. A pile of pages that would reach the top of the Empire State Building. And an effort to find the next ...
Vulnerabilities in PDF platforms from Foxit and Apryse could have been exploited for account takeover, data exfiltration, and other attacks.
Patrick Healy, an assistant managing editor who oversees The Times’s journalistic standards, talked with four of the journalists who are working on the Epstein files to kick around those questions.
From “Trump” to “Russian” to “dentist,” the only way to gaze into the Epstein-files abyss is through a keyword-size hole.
As victims of Jeffrey Epstein's crimes continued seeking justice, users flooded social media with conspiracy theories about ...
It comes from leaves of the oregano plant. You may be familiar with oregano's use in cooking. It's also been used in traditional folk or herbal medicine for centuries to treat or prevent illnesses.