Maggie Miller reports: The FBI and the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) warned Tuesday that major hacking groups are targeting U.S. think tanks. The agencies put out an alert noting that advanced persistent threat (APT) hacking groups were mainly targeting think tanks and individuals involved with international affairs or national security policies….
The painful calculus of ransomware payments
Dennis Fisher writes: The pandemic has disrupted, and in some cases destroyed, the business models of many companies, but it has been a boon for many ransomware gangs, which have taken the opportunity to hone their skills and expand their operations to include new forms of extortion, making an already serious threat into perhaps the…
North Korea-linked hackers targeted J&J, Novavax in hunt for COVID research
Raphael Satter and Jack Stubbs of Reuters report: Suspected North Korean hackers have recently tried to break into at least nine health organizations, including pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson and vaccine developer Novavax Inc, revealing a broader effort to target key players in the race to develop treatments for COVID-19. Four people who have investigated…
Russian hacking group uses Dropbox to store malware-stolen data
Sergiu Gatlan reports: Russian-backed hacking group Turla has used a previously undocumented malware toolset to deploy backdoors and steal sensitive documents in targeted cyber-espionage campaigns directed at high-profile targets such as the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of European Union countries. The previously unknown malware framework, named Crutch by its authors, was used in campaigns spanning…
River City Bank notifies customers after discovering insider wrongdoing
River City Bank had some explaining to do to customers. As described in their notification, a copy of which was submitted to the California Attorney General’s Office, the bank discovered a problem on September 29. An employee downloaded customer data to a personal storage drive and later sent it to a third party. The download…
This incredible exploit could have let hackers remotely own iPhones without even touching them
Sean Hollister reports: … Google Project Zero security researcher Ian Beer has revealed that, until May, a variety of Apple iPhones and other iOS devices were vulnerable to an incredible exploit that could let attackers remotely reboot and take complete control of their devices from a distance — including reading emails and other messages, downloading photos,…