News

Seven personnel from the command will join the five-day Cyber Flag exercise scheduled to kick off Monday (local time) in the ...
The changing face of cyber crimeCompanies and high-profile individuals are using cyber attacks as a way of discrediting and disrupting their competitors, says Richard Frost, Head of Technology and ...
The messages from government agencies and cybersecurity leaders at the end of June were clear – nation-state-sponsored ...
The European Union’s high representative for foreign affairs and security, Kaja Kallas, and Singapore’s coordinating minister ...
The Asia-Indo-Pacific is no longer a distant geopolitical theater. It is the central arena of strategic competition, ...
The North Korean arsenal grew to alarming proportions during Obama’s two terms in office, prompting Pentagon planning for a ...
A recent cyber attack on the Canadian electric utility, Nova Scotia Power, disconnected power meters, preventing the company ...
High-ranking officials of Japan, the United States and South Korea on Friday reaffirmed their commitment to continued ...
Removing federal cyber security responsibilities & pushing some of those responsibilities to the private sector may dilute national security.
Keith Shaw: The North Korean IT job scandal has shaken a lot of companies’ hiring practices to the core—exposing poor processes and revealing serious data security vulnerabilities.
Calling out Chinese-linked hacking has become more common, particularly among Western countries. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.
A newly-declassified intelligence assessment shows the IC's stated views on Russian election meddling shifted dramatically after Donald Trump's surprise win in November 2016.