Activate subscription >
Add devices or upgrade >
Renew subscription >
Secure Hub >
Don’t have an account? Sign up >
< Products
Have a current computer infection?
Worried it’s a scam?
Try our antivirus with a free, full-featured 14-day trial
Get your free digital security toolkit
Find the right cyberprotection for you
< Business
< Pricing
Protect your personal devices and data
Protect your team’s devices and data – no IT skills needed
Explore award-winning endpoint security for your business
< Resources
< Support
Malwarebytes and Teams Customers
Nebula and Oneview Customers
A list of topics we covered in the week of July 14 to July 20 of 2025
Meta executives settled a shareholders' lawsuit alleging continuous disregard of privacy regulations for the price of $8 billion.
The database contained 1,115,061 records including the names of children, birth parents, adoptive parents, and other potentially sensitive information like case notes.
A researcher has disclosed how he found a—now fixed—vulnerability in Meta AI that could have allowed others to see private questions and answers.
File sharing site WeTransfer has rolled back language that allowed it to train machine learning models on any files that its users uploaded.
Google has released an update for its Chrome browser to patch six security vulnerabilities including one zero-day.
A former US army colonel faces up to ten years in prison after revealing national secrets on a foreign dating app.
Amazon has emailed 200 million customers to warn them about a rather convincing phishing campaign.
This week on the Lock and Code podcast, we speak with Anna Brading and Zach Hinkle about whether using AI is damaging for our health.