A connected mower in Germany was described as fully controllable through a flaw, showing how consumer robotics can turn authentication mistakes into real-world risk.
A phishing lure built around Microsoft Teams can push users into installing legitimate remote administration software, turning a normal support workflow into a risky access path.
The malware family linked to Android banking fraud is interesting not for one trick, but for the way it turns ordinary handset features into a potential control layer for attackers.
SDS-Remote is a tool developed by Winfried to add power-user features to a Siglent oscilloscope used from a computer, and that small usability shift carries a bigger security lesson.
Artificial intelligence can help prevent accidents, but once it starts reading worker data, the same system can become a control layer that demands strict governance, not blind trust.
A procurement-themed .js attachment can become a foothold on Windows, showing how a routine inbox task can turn into execution, persistence, and remote control.
A newly observed Android RAT is drawing attention because its value is not just in stealing data, but in giving an operator practical control over a victim’s phone once it is installed.
Anthropic’s new Claude Code feature blurs the line between convenience and risk, letting developers control terminals from anywhere-if attackers don’t get there first.