According to a new study conducted by the Pew Research Center, “bots” account for more activity on Twitter than humans: 66% of all tweets that share links to popular websites and articles are shared ...
Bots are becoming a bigger threat as they get smarter, a new report says. A whopping 73.6 percent of bad bots are so-called Advanced Persistent Bots, which use anonymous proxies, change their ...
A new report from IT security company Imperva indicates that COVID-19 helped give birth to a historic amount of nonhuman activity on the Internet. The report is based on global customer data from the ...
“I love bots” feels like a controversial statement now, given the rise of troll farms deploying them and the proliferation of egg accounts spreading bad information or engaging in harassment. Even if ...
Could internet memes be new heroes in the war against web bots? Researchers at the University of Delaware are exploring that possibility. Web bots are automated programs that crawl the internet, often ...
The company’s sixth annual Cloudflare Radar Year in Review analyzes internet trends across traffic, security, outages, connectivity and AI activity observed on Cloudflare’s global network, which spans ...
As a tech journalist, Zul focuses on topics including cloud computing, cybersecurity, and disruptive technology in the enterprise industry. He has expertise in moderating webinars and presenting ...
eSpeaks' Corey Noles talks with Rob Israch, President of Tipalti, about what it means to lead with Global-First Finance and how companies can build scalable, compliant operations in an increasingly ...
Bots are becoming a bigger threat as they get smarter, a new report says. A whopping 73.6% of bad bots are so-called Advanced Persistent Bots, which use anonymous proxies, change their identities and ...
Robert M. Hertzberg’s hatred of bots is personal. Hertzberg is a state Senator from California and last year, after he introduced a bail reform bill, he noticed that automated accounts on Twitter and ...
Companies are waging an invisible data war online. And your phone might be an unwitting soldier. Retailers from Amazon and Walmart to tiny startups want to know what their competitors charge. Brick ...
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