Imagine a world where artificial intelligence can power your daily tasks—think crafting images or answering complex queries—without a single byte of your personal data being exposed to prying eyes or corporate giants. That’s the bold vision behind Telegram’s latest innovation, a decentralized
Imagine a government initiative designed to protect millions from cyber threats, only to ignite a firestorm of debate over privacy and control within days. This scenario unfolded in India with the "Sanchar Saathi" app, a cybersecurity tool initially mandated for preinstallation on all smartphones
Imagine a world where security threats in cloud environments are not only detected but resolved with lightning speed, thanks to a seamless flow of standardized data across platforms. In today’s complex digital landscape, security operations teams often grapple with fragmented data sources, leading
Every holiday season turns familiar words into attack surfaces as users pick festive themes for speed and recall while attackers preload these exact strings into automated cracking and stuffing engines that exploit the same predictable patterns across consumer and enterprise logins. The mismatch is
Threat actors no longer need deep expertise or time to mount convincing attacks, because generative models now churn out fluent phishing emails, plausible deepfakes, and workable malware variants at volumes that swamp manual defenses and stretch response windows to the breaking point. Yet the same
In a surprising turn of events that has left millions of telecom users on edge, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has undone a significant cybersecurity mandate impacting major U.S. carriers such as AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon, raising urgent questions about the safety of sensitive user