A newly disclosed Linux kernel flaw nicknamed Fragnesia — tracked as CVE-2026-46300 — lets any unprivileged local user gain ...
This month's Patch Tuesday addressed 120 vulnerabilities across Windows, Office, and cloud services, including critical ...
The cyberthreat group targets an Azerbaijani oil-and-gas firm with repeated attack, as the China-linked actors extend ...
Anthropic updated Claude Managed Agents to include capabilities like Dreaming, which lets users toggle memory and ensure ...
The introduction and spread of new and/or re-emerging plant pests and diseases are responsible for severe losses in agricultural production, with negative ...
ASIC Commissioner Simone Constant's open letter last Friday to all AFS licensees and market participants, calling for urgent action on cyber resilience in the face of AI-accelerated threats, has one ...
3 Sectors to Buy While They're Down and 1 to Walk Away From Figma (NYSE:FIG) reported accelerating revenue growth in its fiscal first quarter of 2026, with management pointing to stronger seat ...
Baku is a city where traditions and modernity intertwine, where masterpieces of ancient architecture harmoniously coexist ...
From revamping security culture to transformation threat hunting operations, 2026’s award-winning projects underscore the ...
Krystal Biotech leverages its HSV-1 gene delivery platform, with VYJUVEK generating strong cash flow. Read why I rate KRYS ...
Multi-die assemblies greatly increase the number of things that can go wrong, and the difficulty of finding them.
As SQL Server 2016 approaches end of support in July 2026, a look back at its groundbreaking innovations reveals how it reshaped Microsoft's data platform and why it's time to move forward.