Stryker, a Fortune 500 medical technology company, has been hit with a massive cyberattack that allegedly saw over 200,000 ...
Several US states will soon require age verification for users. How should and can Linux distributions react to this?
After using MacBook Neo, it's clear Windows needs to rethink its PC strategy (and fast) ...
Image courtesy by QUE.com The security world rarely slows down—and this week’s headlines highlight how quickly threats, tools, and ...
Age-verification laws target operating systems because apparently teenagers having root access is now a safeguarding crisis Opinion A new wave of age verification laws requires kids and teenagers to ...
Qt Group has announced a new collaboration with Qualcomm Technologies aimed at streamlining the creation of next‑generation ...
CTM360 reports that more than 4,000 malicious Google Groups and 3,500 Google-hosted URLs are being used in an active malware campaign targeting global organizations. The attackers abuse Google’s ...
With California's new age checking law coming into action in January 2027, there's a lot of discussion on how Linux distributions will be handling it.
Chrome’s new Organizer in Canary brings tab groups, Gemini chats, and AI Mode threads into one panel, with new flags referencing cross-device sync.
F5 introduces new AI security controls, observability features, and NGINX enhancements to secure and manage modern application traffic.
I wasn't really expecting it to just work out of the box, but NFS is surprisingly viable.
These distros bring more to the table ...