Militaries are often cagey about their cyber activities. But the US has hinted at the role it has played.
Iran vs US-Israel war: A major US medical device maker, Stryker, has recently faced a cyberattack and investigators are ...
An Iranian-backed hacker group is suspected of crippling Stryker's global operations, leaving thousands of employees in Ireland and 56,000 worldwide unable to work as all IT systems remain down.
As the Iran war heated up throughout the past week, critical infrastructure sectors, including state and local governments, were placed on high alert for cyber attacks. For example, consider these ...
Modern cyber incidents are providing powerful, real-world examples of how a cyberattack can cause a domino effect across a company's entire supply chain. For example, what started as a detected ...
The supply chain impact was immense, with the retailers experiencing systems going offline, payment disruptions and empty shelves. The financial consequences were also severe, with M&S warning that ...
The U.S. homeland is out of range of military strikes, but state and local governments could see cyber attacks, cloud service disruptions and rising supply costs.
The Co-op has said the cyber-attack it suffered earlier this year cost it at least £206m in lost revenues. The retailer's IT networks were infiltrated by hackers in April, resulted in payment problems ...
Programmable logic controllers (PLCs) are essentially specialized industrial computers that read data from sensors and use that data to automate the control of electromechanical processes, such as the ...
AI-guided impersonation attacks have become both more numerous and more sophisticated as the technology improves, and will likely not abate anytime soon. This is according to a series of polls that ...
The number of AI-enabled cyber-attacks has nearly doubled during the last year, CrowdStrike has warned, as threat actors deployed machine learning and Large Language Models (LLMs) to help optimize ...
“Crossing the Rubicon” means passing a point of no return. The idiom comes from Julius Caesar illegally leading his army across the river Rubicon in 49 B.C., an act that sparked the Roman civil war ...