hackingSecurityTo cripple AI, hackers are turning data against itselfBy Nicole KobieSecurityIBM Made Cops a Tool to Search CCTV Video By Skin ColorBy Emily DreyfussSecurityThe British Airways hack is impressively badBy Matt BurgessSecurityUS Charges North Korean Hacker for Sony and WannaCryBy Brian BarrettSecurityExploiting Decades-Old Tech to Break Into Android DevicesBy Lily Hay NewmanBusinessFriday briefing: US election hacking whistleblower Reality Winner sentenced to five years in prisonBy WIRED InsiderSecurityHow to Protect Yourself Against a SIM Swap AttackBy Brian BarrettSecurityHow Hacked Water Heaters Could Trigger Mass BlackoutsBy Andy GreenbergSecurityFax Machines Are Still Everywhere, and Wildly InsecureBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityTo Identify a Hacker, Treat Them Like a BurglarBy Louise MatsakisSecurityHackers Found a Way to Make the Amazon Echo a Spy BugBy Andy GreenbergSecurityPolice Bodycams Can Be Hacked to Doctor FootageBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityHackable Touchscreens Could Spy on Hotel Rooms and MeetingsBy Louise MatsakisSecurityHacking a Brand New Mac Remotely, Right Out of the BoxBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityA New Pacemaker Hack Puts Malware Directly on the DeviceBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityThe Wild Inner Workings of a Billion-Dollar Hacking GroupBy Brian BarrettSecurityThe rise of SamSam, the hacker group shutting down entire citiesBy Matt BurgessSecurityThe Dixons Carphone data breach is way worse than first thoughtBy Matt BurgessSecurityTrump-Putin Press Conference Gave Russia Everything It WantedBy Brian BarrettSecurityA dumb security flaw let a hacker download US drone secretsBy Matt BurgessCultureFortnite has a cheating problem and it isn't doing enough to fix itBy Richard PridaySecurityThe Ticketmaster hack is a perfect storm of bad IT and bad commsBy Richard PridayBusinessThursday briefing: Ticketmaster breach exposed 40,000 UK customers' detailsBy WIRED InsiderSecurityWi-Fi is about to get one of its biggest ever security updatesBy Richard PridayMore Stories