The APT Name Game: How Grim Threat Actors Get Goofy Monikers
How do advanced persistent threat groups such as Darkhotel and Anchor Panda get their ridiculous names? Go to Source
How do advanced persistent threat groups such as Darkhotel and Anchor Panda get their ridiculous names? Go to Source
Referencing the Dalai Lama, the spam campaign is targeting recipients of a mailing list run by the Central Tibetan Administration. Go to Source
Despite several threat actors stating they are behind a massive 773M credential dump, researchers believe they have found the real distributor. Go to Source
Armed with an impressive bag of exploits and other tricks for propagation, researchers believe the new trojan could be the catalyst for an upcoming, major cyber-offensive. Go to Source
The Department of Justice is looking to dismantle the Joanap botnet, which has been built and controlled by North Korea-linked hackers since 2009. Go to Source
The decorating website said that account usernames, passwords and more have been compromised as part of a breach. Go to Source
The Remexi spyware has been improved and retooled. Go to Source
From Facebook’s research app being pulled from iOS devices to a new-found dump of compromised credentials, here are the top news of the week. Go to Source
Scams, infrastructure attacks, data harvesting and attacks on streamers are all in the offing. Go to Source
Facebook is continuing to crack down on misinformation, political meddling, and “coordinated inauthentic behavior” on its platform. Go to Source