For CIOs, CISOs, technology professionals, and business leaders
For security researchers and others in the InfoSec community
For anyone interested in protecting their personal device and data
Lookout and Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) have discovered Dark Caracal, a persistent and prolific actor running a global espionage campaign against military personnel, enterprises, medical...
Spectre & Meltdown are arguably two of the biggest vulnerabilities in computing and certainly mobile history.
Cyber criminals did not slow down in 2017. We tracked 132 breaches in the last year to some massive and well known companies like Google, Uber,...
Lookout and Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) have discovered Dark Caracal, a persistent and prolific actor running a global espionage campaign...

See why Lookout is positioned as a Leader in the IDC MarketScape for the Mobile Threat Management security software market.
Mobile has emerged as a key component of the Advanced Persistent Threat arsenal. These "mAPTs" take advantage of the smartphone's features and...
Lookout has discovered new variants of the SpyWaller surveillanceware with advanced espionage capabilities. The variants now target Facebook...
Spectre & Meltdown are arguably two of the biggest vulnerabilities in computing and certainly mobile history.
A new study from CSOonline.com and Lookout reveals that while most IT and business leaders believe that mobile threats and risks to corporate data...
Lookout has identified three Android apps disguised as bitcoin wallet apps, previously in the Google Play Store, that trick victims into sending bitcoin payments to attacker-specified bitcoin addresses.
As the size and impact of breaches accelerates, individuals need to stay on top of breach notifications even more than ever. Unfortunately, you can’t always rely on the breached company to tell you everything you need to know.
When done correctly, ML helps organizations defend against new, novel, and increasingly sophisticated mobile threats. Yet with all the attention,...
The recognition that mobile devices are insecure is a step in the right direction, but I have to wonder, is a ban the answer?
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