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Studies provide evidence on cyber threats, vulnerabilities, defensive controls, and user behavior, helping assess security risks and protections.

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Study in this tag covers systematic research, measurement, evaluation, or analysis of information-security technologies, threats, and practices. It may include experiments on attack techniques, assessments of defensive controls, surveys of security behavior, analysis of incidents, or research into vulnerabilities and privacy risks. The relevant question is usually what evidence the work provides, how broadly its findings apply, and whether its methods support reproducible conclusions.

For practitioners, studies can reveal exploitable conditions, estimate how often a weakness occurs, or test whether a control detects and contains attacks under realistic conditions. Interpret results cautiously when samples are small, environments are artificial, or a claimed vulnerability has not been independently validated. Research involving telemetry, users, or personal data also raises privacy and ethical requirements. Useful findings should translate into specific actions, such as prioritizing vulnerability remediation, changing configurations, improving detection logic, or revising secure-development and risk-assessment practices.

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Study finds built-in browsers across gadgets often ship years out of date Web browsers for desktop and mobile devices tend to receive regular security updates, but that often isn't the case for those that reside within game consoles, televisions, e-readers, cars, and other devices. These outdated, embedded browsers can leave you open to phishing and other security vulnerabilities.…

Direct navigation -- the act of visiting a website by manually typing a domain name in a web browser -- has never been riskier: A new study finds the vast majority of "parked" domains -- mostly expired or dormant domain names, or common misspellings of popular websites -- are now configured to redirect visitors to sites that foist scams and malware.