News

CoinMarketCap has reportedly identified and removed a malicious code that targeted users to drain their crypto wallets.
Cointelegraph confirms front-end hack used to push fake crypto token airdrop, echoing CoinMarketCap breach just days earlier.
CoinMarketCap, the popular cryptocurrency price tracking site, suffered a website supply chain attack that exposed site visitors to a wallet drainer campaign to steal visitors' crypto.
CoinMarketCap experienced a brief security breach on June 20 after a malicious pop-up appeared on its homepage.
Hackers hit CoinMarketCap and Cointelegraph with ad-based wallet scams. CZ warns users after $18K stolen from 39 victims via JavaScript exploits.
A new cybersecurity campaign has exposed 67 trojanized GitHub repositories, targeting gamers and developers with malicious ...
Kicking off our Creative Technology for Drummies guide, our glossary helps navigate the tools, trends and terminology shaping ...
Hackers with possible links to Israel have drained more than $90 million from Iran’s largest cryptocurrency exchange Nobitex ...
CoinMarketCap removed a fake wallet pop-up after users flagged a malicious doodle image, causing phishing attempts ...
A deceptive pop-up on CoinTelegraph’s website attempted to trick visitors into believing they had won tokens worth over $5,000.
The official unemployment rate in South Africa rose to 32,9% in the first quarter of 2025, with the number of unemployment people increasing by 237 000 compared to the previous three-month period.
Discover how supply chain attacks target crypto projects through third-party tools, and learn key strategies to protect code, infrastructure and users.