Monthly Archives: April 2026
PHANTOMPULSE Malware Attack Targets Crypto Professionals via Obsidian
Security researchers have uncovered a sophisticated PHANTOMPULSE malware attack targeting financial professionals through malicious Obsidian community plugins and blockchain-based C2 infrastructure. Continue reading
Online Privacy Act 2026: New Federal Doxxing Penalties and Data Rights
The Online Privacy Act 2026 establishes federal doxxing penalties and creates the Digital Privacy Agency to enforce data minimization and corporate security audits. Continue reading
Booking.com data breach: Unauthorized access to customer reservations
Booking.com data breach exposes personal information and reservation details, prompting urgent security measures for affected users to prevent phishing attacks. Continue reading
Giant Tiger breach impacts 2.8 million customers
Retailer Giant Tiger breach exposes 2.8 million customer records after a third-party vendor vulnerability was exploited by cybercriminals. Continue reading
Google Gemini Skills: The New Standard for Browser-Based Micro-SaaS
The launch of Google Gemini Skills transforms the Chrome browser into a hub for micro-SaaS, allowing users to execute complex multi-turn prompts with a single click. Continue reading
Online Privacy Act 2026: Establishing the Digital Privacy Agency
The Online Privacy Act 2026 introduces landmark legislation to establish a Digital Privacy Agency and enforce strict data minimization standards for global tech platforms. Continue reading
NVIDIA Ising models: Open-Source Quantum AI Breakthrough
NVIDIA Ising models introduce the first open-source neural networks for quantum hardware, optimizing calibration and error correction processes. Continue reading
Windows 11 Update April 2026: Smart App Control and AI Features
The latest Windows 11 update introduces a flexible Smart App Control toggle, AI-powered Narrator image descriptions, and voice-enabled file renaming. Continue reading
Wayback Machine Blockade: Major News Sites Restrict Digital History
The rise of the Wayback Machine blockade by major news organizations signals a new ‘dark age’ for internet archaeology as publishers attempt to shield data from AI-scraping. Continue reading