News

A woman's Facebook account takeover reveals dangerous social engineering tactics and provides lessons on recovery, avoiding scams and enacting stronger security measures.
If a website needs you to log in, you can do that securely through a special browser view, which lets the agent dig deeper and handle more.
Facebook scammers impersonated a woman to trick her friend into paying for a nonexistent grant. See the conversation ...
A volcano erupted on Wednesday in southwest Iceland, authorities said, with live media images showing it belched smoke and ...
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is on a mission for his company to be the first to reach so-called artificial superintelligence — generally considered to mean AI that’s better than all humans at all ...
President Kurt Okraku has dismissed claims that the Association has reached a new five-year broadcast agreement with pay-TV ...
The Houston Office of Emergency Management is hoping their alert system will be appealing to the public by only sending you ...
The Hamilton County Coroner's Office identified autograph dealer Brett Lemieux, 45, as the man found dead when police ...
Halde Pottinger (pictured) received five invitations to watch his brother's funeral online - despite attending it in person ...
A six-month undercover operation dubbed “Summer Slammer” resulted in 18 arrests and 5 kilos of drugs recovered, according to ...
So here we are at the outset of named-storm season: more displacement, more societal shunning and worse, all while ...
City officials statewide are urging residents to sign up to receive emergency alerts so they can stay safe in the future ...