Microsoft researchers found a ClickFix campaign that uses the nslookup tool to have users infect their own system with a Remote Access Trojan.
ClickFix campaigns have adapted to the latest defenses with a new technique to trick users into infecting their own machines with malware.
Microsoft details a new ClickFix variant abusing DNS nslookup commands to stage malware, enabling stealthy payload delivery and RAT deployment.
Understand how this artificial intelligence is revolutionizing the concept of what an autonomous agent can do (and what risks ...
HATTIESBURG, Miss. (WHLT) – The College of Business and Economic Development at the University of Southern Mississippi (USM) will launch a new online master’s degree in Business Analytics. The program ...
In the Chicago Urban Heritage Project, College students are turning century-old insurance atlases into interactive digital ...
Public cloud spending is on a steep curve, rising from $595.7 billion in 2024 to $723.4 billion in 2025, and the fastest growing line items are often the ones n ...
Microsoft, Huntress, and Intego this month detailed attacks that show the ongoing evolution of the highly popular compromise technique.
Free beer is great. Securing the keg costs money fosdem 2026 Open source registries are in financial peril, a co-founder of ...
Everything changes with time. Some changes happen so rapidly — like 7 frames or more per second — that we perceive them as ...
Wibu-Systems will exhibit at Embedded World 2026 to present a unified approach to securing embedded innovation across device ...