What happened with Yahoo's massive data breach scandal
Yahoo suffered the largest data breach in history, affecting 3 billion accounts. Here's what went wrong and how to protect yourself from similar attacks.
Loading...
Loading articles...
Understand VPNs, online privacy, and digital security. Page 42 of 89.
Yahoo suffered the largest data breach in history, affecting 3 billion accounts. Here's what went wrong and how to protect yourself from similar attacks.
Self-hosting a VPN in Spain offers complete control and residential IP benefits, but requires technical skills and ongoing maintenance that most users underestimate.
Self-hosting a VPN in Spain offers control but faces strict data retention laws. WireGuard makes setup easier, but privacy concerns remain complex.
Setting up Tailscale creates a secure mesh VPN that connects all your devices seamlessly. Here's how to configure it properly for home use.
Setting up Tailscale securely requires proper configuration of access controls, subnet routing, and device authentication to create a zero-trust mesh network.
Privacy advocates debate whether GrapheneOS's hardcore security or CalyxOS's user-friendly approach offers better protection from Google's surveillance ecosystem, as de-Googled Android phones gain mainstream attention in 2025.
Residential VPNs in Spain operate in a legal gray area with unique privacy risks. Understanding the safety implications is crucial for users.
In a stunning victory for digital privacy, Germany refused to support the EU's Chat Control legislation, blocking the mass surveillance proposal that would have required backdoors in encrypted messaging apps like Signal and threatened VPN services across Europe.
Leaving Google doesn't automatically make you private. Many people swap one data collector for another, missing crucial privacy steps along the way.
NSO Group's Pegasus spyware has infected millions of phones worldwide, turning them into surveillance tools. Here's what you need to know about this privacy threat.
Google's mandatory developer registration policy threatens to eliminate F-Droid and thousands of open-source Android apps by September 2026, according to digital rights advocates who warn this creates an impossible barrier for independent developers.
Privacy advocates are split on degoogling - some say it's essential for digital freedom, while others argue partial privacy is more practical than total isolation.