A highly sophisticated set of iPhone hijacking techniques has likely infected tens of thousands of phones or more. Clues suggest it was originally built for the US government.
Thousands of iPhones were compromised using the Coruna exploit kit, which chained 23 iOS vulnerabilities into advanced attacks used for espionage and cybercrime.
The Fairfax County Police Department’s Mobile Forensic Lab was debuted by Major Christian Quinn, Commander of the Cyber and Forensics Bureau. The mobile lab is a state-of-the-art vehicle that brings ...
Italian authorities are making progress in their investigation into a wide-ranging spyware scandal in Italy involving Paragon ...
Data Reconstruction can be a confusing contract to take on at first in Marathon, but it can be completed fairly easily once you know what to do.
A pair of US lawmakers are calling for an investigation into how easily spies can steal information based on devices’ electromagnetic and acoustic leaks—a spying trick the NSA once codenamed TEMPEST.
A previously undocumented set of 23 iOS exploits named "Coruna" has been deployed by multiple threat actors in targeted espionage campaigns and financially motivated attacks.
Security researchers discover the 'Coruna' exploit kit running on malicious Chinese websites that were able to secretly hack vulnerable iPhones running iOS 13 to 17.2.1.