DefConSecurityAn Apple Malware-Flagging Tool Is ‘Trivially’ Easy to BypassBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityTeens Hacked Boston Subway Cards to Get Infinite Free Rides—and This Time, Nobody Got SuedBy Andy GreenbergBusinessJoe Biden Wants Hackers’ Help to Keep AI Chatbots in CheckBy Khari JohnsonSecurityA New Tractor Jailbreak Rides the Right-to-Repair WaveBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityFlaw in the VA Medical Records Platform May Put Patients at RiskBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityThe Feds Gear Up for a Privacy CrackdownBy Matt Burgess and Andrew CoutsSecurityZoom’s Auto-Update Feature Came With Hidden Risks on MacBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityA Long-Awaited IoT Reverse Engineering Tool Is Finally HereBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityThe Feds Want These Teams to Hack a Satellite—From HomeBy Sarah ScolesSecurityDutch Hackers Found a Simple Way to Mess With Traffic LightsBy Andy GreenbergSecurityHackers Are Building an Army of Cheap Satellite TrackersBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityDefcon Is CanceledBy Lily Hay NewmanSecuritySome Voting Machines Still Have Decade-Old VulnerabilitiesBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityThe Air Force Will Let Hackers Try to Hijack a SatelliteBy Brian BarrettScienceThis DIY Implant Lets You Stream Movies From Inside Your LegBy Daniel OberhausSecurityHackers Can Turn Speakers Into Acoustic CyberweaponsBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityWatch a Drone Take Over a Nearby Smart TVBy Andy GreenbergSecurityHackers Take on Darpa's $10 Million Voting MachineBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityInside the Hidden World of Elevator Phone PhreakingBy Andy GreenbergSecurityHow Safecrackers Can Unlock an ATM in MinutesBy Andy GreenbergSecurityHow Apple Pay Buttons Can Make Websites Less SafeBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityHow a 10-Year-Old Desk Phone Bug Came Back From the DeadBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityA Model Hospital Where the Devices Get Hacked—on PurposeBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityFax Machines Are Still Everywhere, and Wildly InsecureBy Lily Hay NewmanMore Stories