In its latest jab at Beijing, the U.S. will empower companies like Google and Microsoft to act as gatekeepers worldwide for highly sought-after access to AI chips, two people familiar with the draft plan said.
An 18-year-old hacker, identified as Arion Kurtaj from Oxford, who played a key role in the international cybercrime group Lapsus$, has been sentenced to an indefinite hospital order after leaking clips of the highly anticipated Grand Theft Auto 6 (GTA 6).
Eleven of the world’s biggest tech companies, including Amazon.com, Alphabet’s Google and Microsoft, will sign an agreement with the British government on Thursday to step up their efforts to tackle online fraud, the interior ministry said.
Congress next week will hold three hearings on artificial intelligence, including one with Microsoft President Brad Smith and Nvidia chief scientist William Daly as Congress works on legislation to mitigate the dangers of the emerging technology.
Innovative electric car manufacturer Tesla has revealed a data breach affecting approximately 75,000 individuals, attributing the incident to a whistleblower leak rather than a malicious cyberattack.
Ilya Sachkov, the co-founder and CEO of renowned cybersecurity firm Group-IB, was sentenced on Wednesday to 14 years in a strict regime colony after being found guilty of "high treason" by a Moscow city court.
Google has accused India’s antitrust body of ordering changes to its business model "only to protect" rival Amazon, which complained about its struggles to develop a modified version of the Android system due to Google’s restrictions, legal papers show.
Australia’s Medibank Private Ltd said on Thursday it was facing a fourth shareholder class-action lawsuit over a cyberattack incident last year that exposed the personal data of 9.7 million current and former customers.
California-based law firm Cole & Van Note has filed a class-action lawsuit against the City of Oakland for its alleged negligence in protecting residents’ data in a recent data breach.
Five Alphabet subsidiaries, two Meta Platforms units, two Microsoft businesses, Twitter and Alibaba’s AliExpress are among 19 companies subject to landmark EU online content rules, EU industry chief Thierry Breton said on Tuesday.
WhatsApp and other messaging services have united to oppose Britain’s plan to force tech companies to break end-to-end encryption in private messages in its proposed internet safety legislation.