Threat actors are now abusing DNS queries as part of ClickFix social engineering attacks to deliver malware, making this the first known use of DNS as a channel in these campaigns.
This process is called a clean install, which is ironic as there's nothing particularly clean about it: Microsoft has enshittified Windows Setup.
Permissive AI access and limited monitoring could allow malware to hide within trusted enterprise traffic, thereby ...
However, Microsoft is only gradually enabling the MIDI 2.0 features, but intends to complete the process by the end of ...
A fresh Windows install looks clean, but it doesn’t feel right until this app shows up.
How-To Geek on MSN
Your '100% health' SSD score is a trap: The hidden signs of silent data corruption
Your SSD may be hiding errors, and you won't know until it's too late ...
A fake ad-blocking browser extension is deliberately crashing Chrome and Edge to trick users into running malware on their own PCs.
Self-hosted agents execute code with durable credentials and process untrusted input. This creates dual supply chain risk, ...
Researchers use mini plasma explosions to encode the equivalent of two million books into a coaster-sized device. The method ...
Microsoft is reportedly bringing back movable taskbar to Windows 11 in 2026, along with taskbar resizing, both of which are ...
Windows 11 26H1 is real but not for your PC. We went hands-on to find the subtle changes, and we'll tell you why you don't need it.
A threat actor is using Net Monitor for Employees and SimpleHelp to launch ransomware and cryptocurrency attacks.
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