Reporter — The Washington Post
Hayley Tsukayama
All Stories

Your Social Security number may not be secure. But how could we replace it?
They're supposed to be the nine most closely guarded numbers in your life. But with an ever-growing number of companies asking for Social Security numbers - and then hit by...

Your Social Security number may not be secure. But how could we replace it?
But with an ever-growing number of companies asking for Social Security numbers - and then hit by cyber breaches exposing them - experts say the Social Security number is clearly...

Equifax is asking consumers for more personal info, even after massive data breach
After hackers accessed company info on 143 million Americans, Equifax is offering people free credit monitoring for a year. But there is a catch.

Apple’s new iPhone may have different type of screen. Here’s what that means.
Apple is poised to release a new generation of iPhones next week, but the highest expectations are for the 10th-anniversary edition of the iconic smartphone. And, for that phone -...

Your face may become your iPhone password
One of the major new features expected in the next iPhone is a new way to unlock the smartphone: with your face.

The rise of the $1,000 smartphone
As we gear up for another smartphone battle between Samsung and Apple this fall, there is a new wrinkle for the average smartphone customer to consider: prices that edge toward...

First impressions of Samsung’s Galaxy Note 8
Samsung introduced the Note 8 to the world Wednesday, looking to put the recall of the Note 7 behind it once and for all.

Google’s newest Android operating system gets its official name: Oreo
At the height of the day's solar eclipse in New York, Google finally revealed the name of its latest Android operating system - in honor of another dark disc: the...

Change this iPhone setting to prevent oversharing
Some iPhone users are getting unpleasant surprises from a sharing feature they may not realize allows anyone to send pictures to their phones.

What it’s like to shop in Amazon’s version of the convenience store
Amazon has been aggressively courting students as part of its experiment to bring its enormous online shopping operation into the bricks-and-mortar world.