Earlier this week, the NSA announced plans to make plans to transition to quantum-resistant algorithms--so much as they currently exist--while advising everyone else to starting planning to plan for the same.
TODAY, A FEW hundred Bay Area Facebook users will open their Messenger apps to discover M, a new virtual assistant. Facebook will prompt them to test it with examples of what M can do: Make restaurant reservations. Find a birthday gift for your spous
FACE IT: SIRI sucks. So often, she has no clue what you're saying. And when she does, there's a pretty good chance she'll respond with nothing more than a page filled with Internet links.
Investors are wary of the technology sector's prospects this week after one of the market's remaining bulwarks fell victim to the widespread equities rout late last week amid growing fears over the Chinese economy.
An offshoot threatens to throw development of the digital currency into disarray, but such disorganization comes with the territory of open-source software
Facial recognition software, which American military and intelligence agencies used for years in Iraq and Afghanistan to identify potential terrorists, is being eagerly adopted by dozens of police departments around the country to pursue drug dealers
Want to know who will win the 2016 US Presidential election? You might be able to find out simply by running a Google search on each candidate's name, according to a new research by experts at the American Institute for Behavioral Research and Tech
The fingerprint scanner has raised questions since its first integration into the modern smartphone: is it secure, is it reliable, who will have access to my fingerprints?
It's a good thing my job is conducive to feeding my deep-seated need to take as many personality tests as possible and publicly share my results, because here we are with another one:
Meet the man the Department of Defense has put in charge of inventing technology to secure the Internet: Dan Kaufman, a former video game developer turned cyber warrior. Lesley Stahl reports.
Windows 10 splits opinions and it has split mine. I think Microsoft MSFT -2.10% nailed the core OS, but the policies around it are controlling and overly invasive.
IN AN ERA when digital tools allow anyone to make practically anything, inscribing the words "do not duplicate" on a key only invites ambitious lock pickers to do exactly that.
Last week, I was hanging out with some hackers and security experts at a conference in Brooklyn when I took out my Sony phone.
"Oh! The journalist uses Android. That's secure!" said one guy next to me, in a highly sarcastic tone.
On July 29, 2015, Microsoft released its newest operating system: Windows 10. Bloomberg takes you on a trip down memory lane, showing off some of the best, and worst, of Windows. (Video by David Yim, Amy Marino, Ashlee Vance) (Source: Bloomberg)
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