Security Newsletter
The Kobalos Malware steals passwords from Supercomputers
Chrome, Firefox and Edge browsers get an update to fix separate bugs that both allow for remote attacks, which could potentially allow hackers to takeover targeted devices.
Zero-day vulnerabilities caused by bad security patches
Chrome, Firefox and Edge browsers get an update to fix separate bugs that both allow for remote attacks, which could potentially allow hackers to takeover targeted devices.
Costway website compromised by Magento Web Skimmers
Hackers stole payment data from Costway’s website and other compromised Magento 1 websites using e-commerce credit-card skimmers.
Hackers use Identity Theft to take advantage of the COVID-19 Relief plan
The number of reported identity theft cases doubled in the last year after cybercriminals took advantage of people filling to receive government benefits.
NAT Slipstream v2 is firewalls’ worst nightmare
An updated slipstream technique spells danger for vulnerable firewalls.
Emotet, the world’s most dangerous botnet, has finally been stopped.
The internet world is a little safer now after the most dangerous malware botnet infrastructure has been disrupted by coordinated work by law enforcement agencies around the world.
TikTok flaw exposes phone numbers and user ids
TikTok’s database could have been queried by hackers, facilitating privacy violations.
North Korea’s elaborate 0-day campaign hits Security Researchers
Hackers pretending to be security researchers infect multiple systems with malicious backdoor by befriending analysts.
Microsoft explains how their new password monitoring system works
Chrome, Firefox and Edge browsers get an update to fix separate bugs that both allow for remote attacks, which could potentially allow hackers to takeover targeted devices.
A new FreakOut Malware attacks Linux devices
Chrome, Firefox and Edge browsers get an update to fix separate bugs that both allow for remote attacks, which could potentially allow hackers to takeover targeted devices.