Fox-news/tech
- Breakthrough device promises to detect glucose without needles - PreEvnt isaac device uses breath analysis to monitor glucose levels without needles, drawing attention at CES 2026 as a potential breakthrough for diabetes management.
- January scams surge: Why fraud spikes at the start of the year - January scams surge as criminals exploit updated personal data from brokers, targeting consumers with fake account verification and tax notices during peak financial season.
- California billionaires flee state’s wealth tax in the most-predictable result ever - California's proposed billionaire tax would retroactively tax net worth over $1 billion starting January 2026, forcing wealthy residents to leave or pay billions of dollars.
- Can autonomous trucks really make highways safer? - Kodiak AI's autonomous trucks have driven over 3 million miles with impressive safety scores, proving self-driving technology works on real highways today.
- Instagram password reset surge: Protect your account - Instagram users are receiving unexpected password reset emails in social engineering attacks. Learn how to spot these scams and protect your account.
- FCC cracks down on robocall reporting violations - FCC imposes new $10,000 fines on telecom companies for false robocall filings. New penalties take effect Feb. 5 to strengthen enforcement against violations.
- Malicious Mac extensions steal crypto wallets and passwords - Mac users face new security threat as malware infiltrates trusted extension marketplaces, targeting cryptocurrency wallets and passwords through malicious code.
- 5 simple tech tips to improve digital privacy - Privacy tips for iPhone and Android users reveal built-in phone settings to reduce tracking and limit data sharing without advanced technical expertise.
- Teen hackers recruited through fake job ads - Criminal network "The Com" uses fake job posts to recruit teens for cybercrime, with recent arrests including 19-year-old Thalha Jubair accused of $115 million attacks.
- Robots that feel pain react faster than humans - Scientists create self-repairing robotic skin with pain detection and modular magnetic patches. The neuromorphic e-skin enables robots to sense harmful contact instantly.