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A new Golang-based information stealer malware dubbed Titan Stealer is being advertised by threat actors through their Telegram channel. "The stealer is capable of stealing a variety of information from infected Windows machines, including credential data from browsers and crypto wallets, FTP client details, screenshots, system information, and grabbed files," Uptycs security researchers
Categories: News Tags: T-Mobile Tags: ransomware Tags: Microsoft Tags: TikTok Tags: privacy Tags: Data Privacy Day 2023 Tags: Data Privacy Week 2023 Tags: Malwarebytes 2023 State of Mobile Cybersecurity Tags: Riot Games Tags: VASTFLUX Tags: Grand Theft Auto 5 Tags: iPhone Tags: vRealize Tags: video game fish Tags: credit cart theft Tags: DuoLingo Tags: K-12 Tags: Vice Society Tags: Hive ransomware The most interesting security related news from the week of January 23-19. (Read more...) The post A week in security (January 23—29) appeared first on Malwarebytes Labs.
Microsoft is urging customers to keep their Exchange servers updated as well as take steps to bolster the environment, such as enabling Windows Extended Protection and configuring certificate-based signing of PowerShell serialization payloads. "Attackers looking to exploit unpatched Exchange servers are not going to go away," the tech giant's Exchange Team said in a post. "There are too many
The use of software as a service (SaaS) is experiencing rapid growth and shows no signs of slowing down. Its decentralized and easy-to-use nature is beneficial for increasing employee productivity, but it also poses many security and IT challenges. Keeping track of all the SaaS applications that have been granted access to an organization's data is a difficult task. Understanding the risks that
A nasty SSRF bug in Web Services plagues a laundry list of enterprise printers.
By Deeba Ahmed The new variant stood out among other malware because it can infect any attached removable USB device, e.g., floppy, flash, thumb drives, and any system the removable device is plugged into later. This is a post from HackRead.com Read the original post: PlugX Malware Sneaks Onto Windows PCs Through USB Devices
Your fortnightly rundown of AppSec vulnerabilities, new hacking techniques, and other cybersecurity news
Today, Talos is publishing a glimpse into the most prevalent threats we've observed between Jan. 20 and Jan. 27. As with previous roundups, this post isn't meant to be an in-depth analysis. Instead, this post will summarize the threats we've observed by highlighting key
Razer Synapse version 3.7.0731.072516 suffers from a local privilege escalation due to a DLL hijacking vulnerability.
Cybersecurity researchers have uncovered a PlugX sample that employs sneaky methods to infect attached removable USB media devices in order to propagate the malware to additional systems. "This PlugX variant is wormable and infects USB devices in such a way that it conceals itself from the Windows operating file system," Palo Alto Networks Unit 42 researchers Mike Harbison and Jen Miller-Osborn