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12 votes
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Hacking Google with AI for $500,000
26 votes -
So I fell for a phishing
In a moment of distraction, I fell for a phishing phone call and compromised my Google account. It took me 13 minutes to realize how catastrophically stupid I am and begin frantically changing...
In a moment of distraction, I fell for a phishing phone call and compromised my Google account. It took me 13 minutes to realize how catastrophically stupid I am and begin frantically changing passwords. I've run the official Google "secure your account" process probably 10 times (though 9 of those times there was nothing to do). I've checked all my financial info, changed passwords on all sorts of things. As far as I can tell, other than gaining access to my Gmail, I don't think anything else was compromised.
How boned am I? I've got 2FA on basically anything remotely important, and I've had decent password hygiene (although I do use the Google password manager, so that's probably comprimised). Is there something else I should do or be on the lookout for?
52 votes -
Arch User Repository compromised, 1500+ packages affected
61 votes -
WiFi 5 beamforming is able to infer the identity of individuals without a WiFi device on them through passively recording communication in radio networks
54 votes -
GitHub confirms breach of 3,800 repos via malicious VSCode extension
27 votes -
Curl will end its bug bounty program by the end of January due to excessive AI generated reports
63 votes -
Adversaries leverage AI for vulnerability exploitation, augmented operations, and initial access
5 votes -
Behind the scenes hardening Firefox with Claude Mythos Preview
20 votes -
Dirty Frag, an exploit which can obtain root privileges on major Linux distributions
31 votes -
Linux privilege escalation (CVE-2026-31431)
49 votes -
No one can force me to have a secure website!!!
36 votes -
Project Glasswing: securing critical software for the AI era
25 votes -
Claude Mythos preview
25 votes -
Denuvo DRM has been cirmumvented using hypervisor based bypass
51 votes -
Android to debut "advanced flow" for sideloading unverified applications
63 votes -
US regulator bans imports of new foreign-made routers, citing security concerns
58 votes -
Iran-backed hackers claim wiper attack on medtech firm Stryker
21 votes -
Arc Raiders - Discord SDK data exposure
16 votes -
Motorola and GrapheneOS Foundation partnership announced
85 votes -
The internet was weeks away from disaster and no one knew
15 votes -
Keenadu – a multifaceted Android malware that can come preinstalled on new devices
12 votes -
The watchers: how OpenAI, the US government, and Persona built an identity surveillance machine that files reports on you to the feds
25 votes -
archive.today is directing a DDOS attack against my blog
71 votes -
Google's quarterly report on adversarial use of AI for Q4 2025
11 votes -
US FBI stymied by Apple’s Lockdown Mode after seizing journalist’s iPhone
36 votes -
AI will compromise your cybersecurity posture
8 votes -
I need a sanity check from security experts (opening ports on the router)
First, let me just say that I'm tech savvy, but I'm self taught for the most part. I never studied cybersecurity or network security. I know the basics, but not the nitty-gritty. I used to host my...
First, let me just say that I'm tech savvy, but I'm self taught for the most part. I never studied cybersecurity or network security. I know the basics, but not the nitty-gritty.
I used to host my own Anytype Server (note taking app) on my raspberry pi. To do this, the documentation says that I need to open two ports, one TCP and another UDP. So that's what I did, and had it set up this way for a while now.
Yesterday though, my raspberry's microSD died. So while I wait for the new one to arrive, I'm taking the chance to review my home network settings.
I closed off a third port that I had for my synology server (for the OpenVPN). I am now using Wireguard (with Tailscale) which doesn't require opening ports. And since my raspberry is offline, I also turned off the other two ports (as of now, I have none opened)
So here's the thing: I remember from my searching that a lot of people are strongly averse to opening ports. Iirc, the basic idea is that if a bad actor knows my home IP and which ports are open, they can enter. So, in theory, a hacker could potentially infiltrate my raspberry pi - and from there potentially wreak havoc in my other devices.
So my questions are:
1- Is it really like that? Could a hacker gain unlimited access to my raspberry via an opened port?
2- If yes, is there something that I can do to strengthen my raspberry pi security?
3- Am I being overly paranoid by worrying about this, even if it’s theoretically possible?12 votes -
Notepad++ hijacked by state-sponsored hackers
55 votes -
39C3 - Chaos Communications Congress (2025)
16 votes -
PornHub extorted after hackers steal Premium member activity data
33 votes -
Over 120,000 home cameras hacked for 'sexploitation' footage
54 votes -
Poets are now cybersecurity threats: Researchers used 'adversarial poetry' to trick AI into ignoring its safety guard rails and it frequently worked
28 votes -
Disrupting the first reported AI-orchestrated cyber espionage campaign
16 votes -
Mozilla Firefox gets new anti-fingerprinting defenses
59 votes -
The spy who came in from the WiFi: Beware of radio network surveillance!
27 votes -
Leaker reveals which Pixels are vulnerable to Cellebrite phone hacking
62 votes -
The day my smart vacuum turned against me
33 votes -
Norwegian public transport operator Ruter has shared the results of a comprehensive cybersecurity test of electric buses, conducted in an isolated mountain environment
10 votes -
Greg Kroah-Hartman explains the Cyber Resilience Act for open source developers
7 votes -
Data removal services?
Is anyone familiar with data removal services like Incogni, DeleteMe, PrivacyBee, etc? Do they work? Are they safe?
26 votes -
Anthropic disrupts cybercriminal using AI for large-scale theft and extortion
17 votes -
Understanding what a VPN can do for you and how to pick the right one
16 votes -
WinRAR zero-day under active exploitation – update to latest version immediately
40 votes -
The viral 'Tea' app just had a second data breach, and it's even worse
50 votes -
North Korean hackers ran US-based “laptop farm” from Arizona woman’s home
25 votes -
After $380M hack, Clorox sues its “service desk” vendor for simply giving out passwords
27 votes -
Death by a thousand slops
36 votes -
Working on a ~2008 dream gaming computer running Vista (in an old server)
Any clever ways to connect to the Internet safely to update drivers, security, etc? I'd only want to connect to Intel, AMD, Microsoft, etc, and then would physically disconnect the lan card. I...
Any clever ways to connect to the Internet safely to update drivers, security, etc? I'd only want to connect to Intel, AMD, Microsoft, etc, and then would physically disconnect the lan card. I know, dangerous, but I'm trying a piecemeal approach with a flash drive and getting mixed results. I tried to update to Service Pack 2, and it bricked the computer on restart, back to flashing Vista.
15 votes -
Is a career change towards cybersecurity viable for someone with an accountancy background?
Sorry if this isn't the best place to ask. IT and cybersecurity-focused communities over on Reddit aren't exactly the most welcoming places for such questions, and reading the r/ITCareerQuestions...
Sorry if this isn't the best place to ask. IT and cybersecurity-focused communities over on Reddit aren't exactly the most welcoming places for such questions, and reading the r/ITCareerQuestions wiki has made me seriously question if I'm being sold false promises of working in a sector that actually has a low demand for workers. Then again, that wiki page seems more geared towards the US job market.
Two weeks ago, I responded to an Instagram ad advertising cybersecurity courses, because the job market is horrible here in the UK right now, and after some setbacks with my ACCA studies, I am seriously considering just giving up on trying to get into chartered accountancy because that path is closing many more doors for me. A course advisor rang me asking about the reasons I showed interest in the ad, then we had a long discussion about any questions I had, what the sector is apparently like, etc.
Some of the claims seem too good to be true, i.e. that it's an industry where you can afford to be picky, jobs outnumber people by almost 3 to 1, most jobs are remote, the provider boasts a 90%+ employment rate, I don't need programming experience, the most complex thing I'd be doing is running command prompt/powershell commands and scripts.
The firm itself seems legitimate. They offer CompTIA, Microsoft, Cisco, AWS and EC-Council certifications, have good review scores on Trustpilot, are a registered training provider and limited company in the UK, and are supposedly an assured service provider with the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC.) The courses they mentioned to me in their syllabus supposedly come to £4k and would take about six months.
- Am I right to be wary about what this training provider are offering?
- Do you require extensive programming knowledge or a computer science background to work in cybersecurity in any capacity? A friend with an IT background has told me that Python is useful in his field.
- Is the reality of IT and cybersecurity jobs in the UK (or in the West) far different from what has been painted to me?
24 votes