16 Billion Passwords Leak in Massive Hack Targeting Apple, Google, Facebook, and More

Cybercriminals hit tech giants with the largest data breach ever: 16 billion passwords compromised. Your data is likely sitting in their hands.

Hackers Breach Aflac: Customer Health Data and Social Security Details Possibly Exposed

Major insurance provider Aflac suffers devastating data breach exposing millions of sensitive health records and Social Security numbers. Learn who’s behind this coordinated attack.

Massive VirtualMacOSX Data Dump Hits 10,000 Users—Passwords and Bank Info Exposed

VirtualMacOSX’s massive data breach exposes 10,000 users’ banking details and passwords across 102 countries. Your data might be at risk now.

Microsoft 365 Copilot Flaw Lets Hackers Steal Private Teams Data—No Clicks Needed

Microsoft’s AI assistant has quietly betrayed your Teams chats to hackers without needing a single click. This zero-click flaw exposes billions to data theft.

Chinese State-Tied Hackers Allegedly Breached US Internet Providers Tied to Critical Infrastructure

Chinese hackers penetrated America’s largest telecom companies, exposing sensitive data from Trump, Harris, and millions of users. Who’s next?

Equifax’s Costliest Mistake: How a Missed Patch Risked 147 Million Identities

One missed software update led to 147 million stolen identities and a $700 million nightmare. Find out how Equifax’s epic blunder changed cybersecurity forever.

Unprotected Database Exposes 4 Billion Chinese User Records, Including Alipay and WeChat Data

China’s largest data breach exposes 4 billion private records, revealing every aspect of citizens’ lives. Who left the digital door wide open?

Millions at Risk: 86M AT&T Records Leak Includes Decrypted Social Security Numbers

Cybercriminals claim 86M AT&T records, including decrypted SSNs, while the telecom giant denies responsibility. Your personal data could be at risk.

Exposed: Unprotected API Leaks Access Tokens of 50,000+ Azure AD Users, Including Executives

Over 50,000 Azure AD users, including executives, were compromised by a simple JavaScript file containing access tokens. Find out how bad it got.