March 25 (Reuters) - Top Trump administration officials used messaging app Signal to share war plans and mistakenly included a journalist in the encrypted chat, spurring calls by Democratic lawmakers ...
Gray-market exploit brokers are alive and kicking, with the latest sign of this flourishing market coming in the form of a bidding war for Signal messaging app zero-days from a relatively new entrant.
The security of U.S. government officials’ communications has come under the spotlight again after a modified Signal app used to archive data from third-party messaging apps was hacked in less than 30 ...
The Trump administration is facing heavy blowback for using Signal, a messaging app, to discuss sensitive military plans. On March 24, officials’ usage of the app was revealed after The Atlantic ...
According to the Atlantic, top White House officials used the end-to-end encrypted messaging app Signal to discuss military strikes in Yemen before those strikes were carried out on March 15. White ...
Aimee Picchi is the associate managing editor for CBS MoneyWatch, where she covers business and personal finance. She previously worked at Bloomberg News and has written for national news outlets ...
If you hadn’t heard of Signal before Monday, chances are you have now. The secure messaging app, available for iPhones and Android devices, has long been popular with journalists because of its robust ...
Highly sensitive attack plans on Iranian-backed militants in Yemen were seemingly accidentally shared with a journalist as they were happening when top Trump administration officials included Jeffrey ...
Signal is a messaging app that uses end-to-end encryption to keep your messages private. When you send a message on Signal, the only people who can see it are the recipients. You can use the Signal ...
Signal’s president says the encrypted messaging app will quit the UK if planned legislation weakens end-to-end encryption. Meredith Whittaker tells the BBC that Signal “would absolutely, 100% walk” ...