FROST uses JavaScript and OPFS SSD timing to identify websites at 88.95% F1, exposing cross-browser privacy leaks.
The best transitions happen when owners bring the right advisors together early and take time to evaluate all the moving ...
That’s precisely how the multitalented duo of Cedric The Entertainer, 62, and Anthony Anderson, 55, feel about their new project, AC Barbeque: The Husky and Handsome Guide to Grilling. The cookbook ...
Now sites have a new way to spy on their visitors: measuring subtle interactions with their solid-state drives. The technique, named FROST (fingerprinting remotely using OPFS-based SSD timing), allows ...
Treasury and fraud specialists Scott Edwards, Director of Fraud Risk Management, and Todd Martin, SVP, Treasury Management ...
Prime Day is almost here, and it’ll be hard to avoid if you have a pulse, a Prime membership, and a smartphone. The four-day ...
Some imports of canned vegetables will be subject to a 10-per-cent tariff as Ottawa rushes to protect domestic processors who ...
There's reportedly a new way for websites to spy on visitors: by monitoring how their computers' SSDs behave. The technique is called FROST, short for "fingerprinting remotely using OPFS‑based SSD ...
Plus: Hackers use Meta’s AI bots to hack Instagram accounts, Anthropic helps NSA hackers, a decades-long GPS satellite ...
Japan needs to revisit the pacifist posture that has defined it since World War Two, Shinjiro Koizumi says.
Looking ahead: A research team in Austria has identified a new way for websites to quietly observe what users are doing on their devices using nothing more than a browser and faint signals from the ...