The bad actors released a database with thousands of employee records.
Readers of the business newspaper Fast Company who subscribe to updates through Apple News on Tuesday night reported receiving a few vulgar push alerts with racial epithets.
Many users were taken aback by the messages, which if you weren't expecting them, may really make you spit up, and many of them turned to Twitter to provide screenshots.
Fast Company claims that its Apple News account was hacked and used to deliver "obscene and racist" push notifications in a statement to Engadget.
It further stated that the incident was connected to a Sunday afternoon hack and that it had gone so far as to temporarily shut down the entire FastCompany.com domain.
The publication said:
“Fast Company’s content management system account was hacked on Tuesday evening. As...
QoreID, a company dedicated to digital identity and consumer analytics solutions for medium and large businesses, has launched in Ghana.
QoreID provides a secure API...
QoreID’s entry into the Ghana market is about offering a consistent portfolio of services that will work to empower the financial sector and contribute...
A dedicated digital identity and consumer analytics solution company, QoreID has been launched into the Ghanaian market to offer consistent portfolio of services that...
Meta confirmed that it's in testing.
Unwanted nudity photographs are a huge issue on social media, but Instagram is allegedly developing a solution that could...