News
Uncle Sam lets Google take Wiz for $32B
Google's second attempt to acquire cloud security firm Wiz is going a lot better than the first, with the Department of Justice clearing the $32 billion deal, which ranks as Google's largest-ever acquisition.…
AMD red-faced over random-number bug that kills cryptographic security
AMD will issue a microcode patch for a high-severity vulnerability that could weaken cryptographic keys across Epyc and Ryzen CPUs.…
Attackers abuse Gemini AI to develop ‘Thinking Robot’ malware and data processing agent for spying purposes
Nation-state goons and cybercrime rings are experimenting with Gemini to develop a "Thinking Robot" malware module that can rewrite its own code to avoid detection, and build an AI agent that tracks enemies' behavior, according to Google Threat Intelligence Group.…
M&S pegs cyberattack cleanup costs at £136M as profits slump
Marks & Spencer says its April cyberattack will cost around £136 million ($177.2 million) in total.…
Famed software engineer DJB tries Fil-C… and likes what he sees
Famed mathematician, cryptographer and coder Daniel J. Bernstein has tried out the new type-safe C/C++ compiler, and he's given it a favorable report.…
UK agri dept spent hundreds of millions upgrading to Windows 10 – just in time for end of support
The UK's Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (Defra) has spent £312 million (c $407 million) modernizing its IT estate, including replacing tens of thousands of Windows 7 laptops with Windows 10 – which officially reached end of support last month.…
Uncle Sam wants to scan your iris and collect your DNA, citizen or not
If you're filing an immigration form - or helping someone who is - the Feds may soon want to look in your eyes, swab your cheek, and scan your face. The US Department of Homeland Security wants to greatly expand biometric data collection for immigration applications, covering immigrants and even some US citizens tied to those cases.…
Russian spies pack custom malware into hidden VMs on Windows machines
Russia's Curly COMrades is abusing Microsoft's Hyper-V hypervisor in compromised Windows machines to create a hidden Alpine Linux-based virtual machine that bypasses endpoint security tools, giving the spies long-term network access to snoop and deploy malware.…
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's security falls apart amid layoffs
The infosec program run by the US' Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) "is not effective," according to a fresh audit published by the Office of the Inspector General (OIG).…
Invasion of the message body snatchers! Teams flaw allowed crims to impersonate the boss
Microsoft Teams, one of the world's most widely used collaboration tools, contained serious, now-patched vulnerabilities that could have let attackers impersonate executives, rewrite chat history, and fake notifications or calls – all without users suspecting a thing.…
Cybercrooks getting violent more often to secure big payouts in Europe
Researchers are seeing a "dramatic" increase in cybercrime involving physical violence across Europe, with at least 18 cases reported since the start of the year.…
OpenAI API moonlights as malware HQ in Microsoft’s latest discovery
Hackers have found a new use for OpenAI's Assistants API – not to write poems or code, but to secretly control malware.…
China's president Xi Jinping jokes about backdoors in Xiaomi smartphones
Chinese president Xi Jinping has joked that smartphones from Xiaomi might include backdoors.…
AN0M, the backdoored ‘secure’ messaging app for criminals, is still producing arrests after four years
Australian police last week made 55 arrests using evidence gathered with a backdoored messaging app that authorities distributed in the criminal community.…
MIT Sloan quietly shelves AI ransomware study after researcher calls BS
Do 80 percent of ransomware attacks really come from AI? MIT Sloan has now withdrawn a working paper that made that eyebrow-raising claim after criticism from security researcher Kevin Beaumont.…
Ransomware negotiator, pay thyself! Rogues committed extortion while working for infosec firms
A ransomware negotiator and an incident response manager at two separate cybersecurity firms have been indicted for allegedly carrying out ransomware attacks of their own against multiple US companies.…
AWS, Nvidia, CrowdStrike seek security startups to enter the arena
Cloud and AI security startups have two weeks to apply for a program that fast-tracks access to investors and mentors from Amazon Web Services, CrowdStrike, and Nvidia.…
Cybercrooks team up with organized crime to steal pricey cargo
Cybercriminals are increasingly orchestrating lucrative cargo thefts alongside organized crime groups (OCGs) in a modern-day resurgence of attacks on freight companies.…
Metropolitan Police hails facial recognition tech after record year for arrests
London's Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) says the hundreds of live facial recognition (LFR) deployments across the Capital last year led to 962 arrests, according to a new report on the controversial tech's use.…
The race to shore up Europe’s power grids against cyberattacks and sabotage
Feature It was a sunny morning in late April when a massive power outage suddenly rippled across Spain, Portugal, and parts of southwestern France, leaving tens of millions of people without electricity for hours.…