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Ransomware attacks are a major problem for organizations everywhere, and the severity of this problem continues to intensify. Recently, Microsoft's Incident Response team investigated the BlackByte 2.0 ransomware attacks and exposed these cyber strikes' terrifying velocity and damaging nature. The findings indicate that hackers can complete the entire attack process, from gaining initial access
The economic damage of DDoS attacks is tough to measure — who can really say how much money Blizzard missed out on by not having players in “Diablo IV” for a few hours spending money on microtransactions or choosing to buy the game?
An issue in Zimbra Collaboration ZCS v.8.8.15 and v.9.0 allows an attacker to execute arbitrary code via the sfdc_preauth.jsp component.
Attackers are leveraging well-executed brand impersonation in a Google ads malvertising effort that collects both credit card and bank details from victims.
Six months of honeypot data finds that 19% of traffic to sensors were malicious exploit attempts, and 95% of those attempts came from just three botnets.
Categories: Exploits and vulnerabilities Categories: News Tags: Medtronic Tags: Paceart Optima Tags: CVE-2023-31222 Tags: deserialization Tags: update Tags: messaging A vulnerability in Medtronic's Paceart Optima cardiac device could lead to further network penetration, RCE, and DoS attacks (Read more...) The post Warning issued over vulnerability in cardiac devices appeared first on Malwarebytes Labs.
The "TeamsPhisher" cyberattack tool gives pen testers — and adversaries — a way to deliver malicious files directly to a Teams user from an external account, or tenant.
A sophisticated stealer-as-a-ransomware threat dubbed RedEnergy has been spotted in the wild targeting energy utilities, oil, gas, telecom, and machinery sectors in Brazil and the Philippines through their LinkedIn pages. The malware "possesses the ability to steal information from various browsers, enabling the exfiltration of sensitive data, while also incorporating different modules for
You can't encrypt a file you can't open — Microsoft could dramatically impact ransomware by slowing it down.
By Waqas Anonymous Sudan group took to Telegram to claim that it had stolen 30 million accounts belonging to Microsoft customers. This is a post from HackRead.com Read the original post: Microsoft rubbishes Anonymous Sudan’s claim of Stealing 30M accounts