New research from Kaspersky reveals how AI-driven tools and predictable patterns like "Skibidi" or trailing numbers make passwords vulnerable.
Troy Johnson has been fighting for Black books since before most people knew what a website was. In 1997, the Harlem-raised entrepreneur sat down to teach himself e-commerce and ended up building ...
The buzz of the Israeli drone was constant that day, and every time Ahmad Turmus looked up, it seemed to be circling over him ...
In a world increasingly shaped by disposable content and fleeting digital interactions, vellichor reminds people of the ...
Ahmad Turmus got in his car, started it up, and drove off. Less than 30 seconds later came the shriek of the two missiles ...
In exploiting the human instinct to seek threat, online “rage bait” is dividing society. Is it time it came with a warning ...
To make SAT prep more effective and financially accessible, a sophomore at Dr. Kiran C. Patel High School in Florida created ...
The landscape of puzzle-solving has shifted from manual brute-force methods to AI-assisted development, with Microsoft Copilot now capable of generating and editing code directly in your live ...
The Devil Wears Prada 2 comes 20 years after the OG. Much has changed. Cerulean is out. But so is magazine clout ...
Forget sticky notes and password resets. Follow these three easy tips to create passwords you can actually remember—and no ...
There are many reasons to be skeptical of the government’s AI strategy. Savings projections resulting from digi ...
The most high-profile example so far might be Girls creator Lena Dunham, who bolstered the traditional press tour for her new ...