26 articles from Ars Technica
Deal also launched the first quantum foundry company, but is there a need for it?
Critics note a lack of factual support in lawsuit filed by US Senate candidate.
GitHub is just the latest victim of TeamPCP, a gang that has carried out a spree of software supply chain attacks.
Beneficiaries include startup backed by firm with links to the Trump family.
Google publishes exploit code before patch, reported 29 months earlier, is fixed.
SSH keys, plaintext passwords, other sensitive data had been up since November 2025.
It's not entirely clear how the exploit works. Microsoft says it's investigating.
Layoffs are "not a savings-driven restructure," CFO says.
Production-version patches are coming online and should be installed pronto.
Across the country, schools and colleges postpone year-end tests.
The developer of Firefox says it has "completely bought in" on AI-assisted bug discovery.
A celebration of the tweaks and customizations that make life easier at the CLI.
Daemon Tools users: It's time to check your machines for stealthy infections, stat.
Reddit REALLY wants you to use its app.
Amid falling revenue and store closures, GameStop wants to buy the much larger eBay.
The outage has hampered communication concerning a critical vulnerability that gives root.
CopyFail threatens multi-tenant servers, CI/CD work flows, Kubernetes containers, and more.
Security firms find themselves especially exposed.
If you're one of millions using element-data, it's time to check for compromise.
Hundreds of subdomains from dozens of universities have been hijacked by scammers.
Technically speaking, there's no practical benefit to use PQC. So why is it being used?
When authentication fails, things can go very, very wrong.
A stubborn misconception is hampering the already hard work of quantum readiness.
Grinex says needed hacking resources "available exclusively to... unfriendly states."
Here's which players are winning the race to transition to post-quantum crypto.
Western Union exec says there were "challenges" working with Broadcom.