Teamviewer Security Breach Update: Russian APT Group Behind SolarWinds Named as Suspect
Teamviewer has now confirmed that a Russian APT group is the likely culprit in a security breach that impacted the “corporate environment” of its company.
Teamviewer has now confirmed that a Russian APT group is the likely culprit in a security breach that impacted the “corporate environment” of its company.
Without juicy US Federal Reserve stolen data on offer, this appears to be a more run-of-the-mill breach, albeit one that does look to contain sensitive financial information. The silver lining is that such an audacious lie points to LockBit being on the ropes.
Whistleblower paints a picture of a corporate culture where Azure sales and feature innovation were stressed over all to product managers, and the many security flaws that were reported as part of this rapid development were pushed to “won’t fix” status.
LockBit hackers took advantage of a temporary national data center, one of four used by Indonesia’s government, to deploy ransomware and snarl various services in the country in a cyber attack last week.
IntelBroker of the underground hacking forum BreachForums is at it again, and AMD has confirmed that the claimed data breach is legitimate and involved an unnamed third party vendor.
Recent cyber attack on London hospitals, caused by an attack on a shared pathology lab that had been previously identified as a cybersecurity risk shows the popularity of healthcare organizations as a target for ransomware.
Kaspersky joins TikTok in facing US bans over hypothetical espionage. The move will likely cause substantial financial damage to the company. Kaspersky products are widely used in the US in spite of concerns about Russian hacking.
A fairly major destructive cyber attack that took place over half a year ago is only just now becoming known to the public. ISP in the Midwest region of the United States was targeted and about 600,000 internet routers ended up being destroyed.
A Google insider has released a database leak documenting six years of privacy breaches that were largely unknown to the general public. While each of the items in the database leak is small, there are thousands in total, spanning six years of company history.
If the Hudson Rock post turns out to be fully accurate, the origin of the Ticketmaster data breach (and all other incidents involving Snowflake customers) may have taken place all the way back in October 2023.