InfoSec News Nuggets 08/09/2021

iMazing app updated with tool to easily detect Pegasus spyware on iPhone You may have heard about Pegasus, which is a spyware created by the NSO group based on zero-day vulnerabilities to collect data from smartphones without user consent. Now iMazing has updated its app to include a new tool that can easily detect Pegasus spyware on iPhone. As we reported last month, Amnesty International has released a tool that helps users detect if a device…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 07/06/2021

Colombia catches hacker wanted in the U.S. for ‘Gozi’ virus Colombian officials say they have arrested a Romanian hacker who is wanted in the U.S. for distributing a virus that infected more than a million computers from 2007 to 2012. Mihai Ionut Paunescu faces computer intrusion and banking fraud charges in New York, where prosecutors say he was part of a ring of criminals that developed and spread the “Gozi” virus and other forms of…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/25/2021

NIST Publishes Ransomware Guidance The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has published new draft guidance for organizations concerning ransomware attacks. The Cybersecurity Framework Profile for Ransomware Risk Management features advice on how to defend against the malware, what to do in the event of an attack, and how to recover from it. NIST's Ransomware Profile can be used by organizations that have already adopted the NIST Cybersecurity Framework and wish to improve their risk postures. It can…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/24/2021

Toyota trains its robots to wipe down tables while taking selfies Apparently, transparent and reflective surfaces are confusing for robots, and that's a problem companies designing machines for household chores need to overcome. Toyota has developed a solution for the issue and has released a video demonstrating its robot wiping down tables and other surfaces — all while taking the video itself. As the company explains, "most robots are programmed to react to the objects and geometry…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/23/2021

How Cyber Safe is Your Drinking Water Supply? Amid multiple recent reports of hackers breaking into and tampering with drinking water treatment systems comes a new industry survey with some sobering findings: A majority of the 52,000 separate drinking water systems in the United States still haven’t inventoried some or any of their information technology systems — a basic first step in protecting networks from cyberattacks. The Water Sector Coordinating Council surveyed roughly 600 employees of water…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/22/2021

Facial Recognition Failures Are Locking People Out of Unemployment Systems People around the country are furious after being denied their unemployment benefits due to apparent problems with facial recognition technology that claims to prevent fraud. Unemployment recipients have been complaining for months about the identity verification service ID.me, which uses a combination of biometric information and official documents to confirm that applicants are who they claim to be. The complaints reached another crescendo this week after Axios published a “deep dive” article about…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/21/2021

AI Creates False Documents That Fake Out Hackers Hackers constantly improve at penetrating cyberdefenses to steal valuable documents. So some researchers propose using an artificial-intelligence algorithm to hopelessly confuse them, once they break in, by hiding the real deal amid a mountain of convincing fakes. The algorithm, called Word Embedding–based Fake Online Repository Generation Engine (WE-FORGE), generates decoys of patents under development. But someday it could “create a lot of fake versions of every document that a…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/17/2021

Critical ThroughTek Flaw Opens Millions of Connected Cameras to Eavesdropping The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) on Tuesday issued an advisory regarding a critical software supply-chain flaw impacting ThroughTek's software development kit (SDK) that could be abused by an adversary to gain improper access to audio and video streams. "Successful exploitation of this vulnerability could permit unauthorized access to sensitive information, such as camera audio/video feeds," CISA said in the alert. ThroughTek's point-to-point (P2P) SDK…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/16/2021

Baby Clothes Giant Carter’s Leaks 410K Customer Records Baby clothes retailer Carter’s inadvertently exposed the personal data of hundreds of thousands of its customers, dating back years, according to a new disclosure. The issue started with Linc, which is a vendor the company used to automate purchases online, according to analysts with vpnMentor who first discovered the issue. The Linc system was delivering customers shortened URLs with Carter’s purchase and shipping details without basic security protections. The…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/15/2021

Lewd Phishing Lures Aimed at Business Explode Attackers have amped up their use of X-rated phishing lures in business email compromise (BEC) attacks. A new report found a stunning 974-percent spike in social-engineering scams involving suggestive materials, usually aimed at male-sounding names within a company. The Threat Intelligence team with GreatHorn made the discovery and explained it’s not simply libido driving users to click on these suggestive scams. Instead, these emails popping up on people’s…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/14/2021

How Hackers Used Slack to Break into EA Games The group of hackers who stole a wealth of data from game publishing giant Electronic Arts broke into the company in part by tricking an employee over Slack to provide a login token, Motherboard has learned. The group stole the source code for FIFA 21 and related matchmaking tools, as well as the source code for the Frostbite engine that powers games like Battlefield and other internal game…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/11/2021

How to Protect Seniors Against Cybercrimes and Scams Many of the crimes that occur in real life happen on the internet too. Credit card fraud, identity theft, embezzlement, and more, all can be and are being done online. Seniors and the elderly are often targeted for these cybercrimes. They tend to be more trusting than younger people and usually have better credit, and more wealth. This makes them more attractive to scammers. Seniors are considered…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/10/2021

American Heart Association study confirms Apple's MagSafe tech poses a risk to cardiac devices What just happened? Apple has already warned users with fitted medical devices to be careful where they place their iPhone 12, and now the American Heart Association (AHA) has shown why people should heed this advice. The AHA's study also suggests the handsets pose a bigger risk than older iPhones, something Apple claimed isn't the case. Back in January, Apple said that…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/09/2021

Software bug to blame for global internet outage, Fastly says Fastly, the company behind a major global internet outage this week, said on Wednesday the incident was caused by a bug in its software that was triggered when one of its customers changed their settings. Tuesday’s outage raised questions about the reliance of the internet on a few infrastructure companies. Fastly’s issue knocked out high traffic sites including news providers such as The Guardian and…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/08/2021

US truck and military vehicle maker Navistar discloses data breach Navistar International Corporation (Navistar), a US-based maker of trucks and military vehicles, says that unknown attackers have stolen data from its network following a cybersecurity incident discovered on May 20, 2021. The company disclosed the attack in an 8-K report filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Monday. Navistar says that its operations haven't been affected despite the security breach as its IT…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/07/2021

Colonial Pipeline Hackers Used Unprotected VPN to Access Network The ransomware attack that took down the Colonial Pipeline and caused fuel shortages on the East Coast worked because of an unprotected Virtual Private Network (VPN). The criminal gang of hackers known as DarkSide who took responsibility for the attack gained access to the Pipeline's system through an unprotected VPN account that had been set up to allow employees to access the company's computer networks remotely, according to…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/04/2021

1 - NY transit officials confirm cyberattack; say harm limited Hackers infiltrated computer systems for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority in New York, setting off a scramble to counter a potentially crippling cyberattack against North America's largest transit system, MTA officials confirmed on Wednesday. The officials said in a statement that that agency received an alert from the FBI and other federal agencies saying three of its 18 computer systems were put at risk. The MTA insisted that…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/03/2021

1 - Russian underground forums launch competitions for cryptocurrency, NFT hacks Cybercriminals in underground forums have been soliciting techniques for compromising cryptocurrency services. Capture the Flag competitions, conference calls for papers, and gamification in cybersecurity courses designed to equip learners with hands-on skills are all common in the white hat realm, but in opposition, contests are also being launched by cybercriminals to create new offensive techniques.  Over the past month, according to Intel 471, operators of…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/02/2021

1 - Hackers are targeting employees returning to the post-COVID office With COVID-19 restrictions lifting and employees starting to make their way back into offices, hackers are being forced to change tack. While remote workers have been scammers’ main target for the past 18 months due to the mass shift to home working necessitated by the pandemic, a new phishing campaign is attempting to exploit those who have started to return to the physical workplace.…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 06/01/2021

1 - Cryptocurrency scam attack on Twitter reminds users to check their app connections Are you doing enough to prevent scammers from hijacking your social media accounts? Even if you have chosen a strong, unique password for your online presence and enabled two-factor authentication it’s possible that you’ve overlooked another way in which online criminals could commandeer your social media accounts and spam out a message to your followers. That’s a lesson that internet entrepreneur…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/28/2021

1 - NASA Identified Over 6,000 Cyber Incidents in Past 4 Years The U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) identified more than 6,000 cyber-related incidents in the last four years, according to a report published this month by NASA’s Office of Inspector General. NASA has institutional systems, which are used for the day-to-day work of employees — these include data centers, web services, computers and networks. It also has mission systems, which support its…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/27/2021

1 - Bitdefender’s Position on Ransomware Attacks and Decryptors This week Bitdefender was named in a press article regarding our decision to release a free decryptor in January 2021 to help those affected by Darkside ransomware. The authors of the article assert that publicly releasing a ransomware decryptor enables malicious actors to modify their methods to evade future decryption, thus increasing the risk of successful future attacks. This assertion is flawed from a common sense…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/26/2021

1 - Russia makes good on its threat to fine Google over 'illegal' internet content Russian authorities on Tuesday fined Google 6 million rubles, or just under $82,000, after the company failed to comply with Moscow's demands to delete prohibited online content. On Monday, Russia's internet watchdog, Roskomnadzor, gave Google 24 hours to delete more than 26,000 instances of online media considered to be illegal in the country. If their demands weren't met, authorities threatened to…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/25/2021

1 - Audio maker Bose discloses data breach after ransomware attack Bose Corporation (Bose) has disclosed a data breach following a ransomware attack that hit the company's systems in early March. In a breach notification letter filed with New Hampshire's Office of the Attorney General, Bose said that it "experienced a sophisticated cyber-incident that resulted in the deployment of malware/ransomware across" its "environment." "Bose first detected the malware/ransomware on Bose's U.S. systems on March 7,…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/24/2021

1 - The Cybersecurity 202: Cybersecurity pros are split on banning ransomware payments Some cybersecurity pros want to ban ransomware victims from paying hackers to unlock their computer systems. They argue it’s the only way to halt a wave of debilitating and increasingly brazen cyberattacks for profit. But such bans could do more harm than good, forcing companies out of business if they can’t get back online, other experts warn. They could also endanger lives…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/21/2021

1 - Toyota rear-ended by twin cyber attacks that left ransomware-shaped dents Toyota has admitted to a pair of cyber-attacks. The first hit the European operations of its subsidiary Daihatsu Diesel Company, a Toyota-owned company entity that designs engines. In a statement [PDF] dated May 16th, Daihatsu said it “experienced a problem in accessing its file server in the internal system on 14 May 2021.” “After a brief investigation, a cyber-attack by an unauthorized access…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/20/2021

1 - Introducing Site Isolation in Firefox When two major vulnerabilities known as Meltdown and Spectre were disclosed by security researchers in early 2018, Firefox promptly added security mitigations to keep you safe. Going forward, however, it was clear that with the evolving techniques of malicious actors on the web, we needed to redesign Firefox to mitigate future variations of such vulnerabilities and to keep you safe when browsing the web! We are excited to announce that Firefox’s new Site Isolation…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/19/2021

1 - iPhone calendar spam attacks on the rise Recently, we have seen an increasing number of reports from iPhone users about their calendars filling up with junk events. These events are most often either pornographic in nature, or claim that the device has been infected or hacked, and in all cases they contain malicious links. This phenomenon is known as “calendar spam.” Calendar spam became a big problem for Apple’s iCloud calendars back in 2016. At…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/18/2021

1 - Major Privacy Breach as Eufy Security Camera Owners Report Seeing Other Users' Video Feeds Owners of Eufy home security cameras are this morning reporting seeing live and recorded feeds show up in the Eufy app from other users' cameras, in what appears to be a disturbing breach of privacy and a major malfunctioning of the company's service. As with many connected domestic security cameras, Eufy cameras offer users the ability to view real-time…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/17/2021

1 - Bitcoin And Alternative Cryptos In The Cybercriminal Underground The popularity of Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies continue to progress in the modern-day, with drastically surging valuations. Notably, Bitcoin surpassed its all-time high of USD 20,000 (in 2017) to achieve an eye-watering USD 60,000 at the time of writing (April 2021). And while legislation and law enforcement continue to try to get a stranglehold on the growing cryptocurrency space, cybercriminality has been at the forefront of…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/14/2021

1 - I Mailed an AirTag and Tracked Its Progress I live near Stratford-upon-Avon, in the United Kingdom, and I sent the AirTag to a friend south of London. I mailed this AirTag on Friday afternoon, and, with first-class postage, I expected the envelope to be delivered the next day. The AirTag weighs a mere 11g, so I put one taped to a card, then in a small bubble envelope for protection. I dropped it…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/13/2021

1 - US Questions Whether Businesses Should Pay Cyberattack Ransom In the wake of a situation last weekend in which a group of hackers shut down a U.S. oil pipeline, the White House is thinking about whether there’s merit to making ransom payments to cyberattackers, the Financial Times (FT) reported. The oil pipeline situation highlighted a serious threat to critical infrastructure, according to FT. The FBI has long been opposed to making ransom payments to attackers saying that doing so would only…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/12/2021

1 - Amazon Fake Reviews Scam Exposed in Data Breach The SafetyDetectives cybersecurity team uncovered an open ElasticSearch database exposing an organized fake reviews scam affecting Amazon. The server contained a treasure trove of direct messages between Amazon vendors and customers willing to provide fake reviews in exchange for free products. In total, 13,124,962 of these records (or 7 GB of data) have been exposed in the breach, potentially implicating more than 200,000 people in unethical activities.…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/11/2021

1 - Thousands of Tor exit nodes attacked cryptocurrency users over the past year For more than 16 months, a threat actor has been seen adding malicious servers to the Tor network in order to intercept traffic and perform SSL stripping attacks on users accessing cryptocurrency-related sites. The attacks, which began in January 2020, consisted of adding servers to the Tor network and marking them as “exit relays,” which are the servers through which traffic…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/10/2021

1 - Twitter's Tip Jar Privacy Fiasco Was Entirely Avoidable ON THURSDAY, TWITTER continued its grand tradition of embracing features users had unofficially pioneered (see also: the @-reply, the retweet, the hashtag) by instituting a Tip Jar. Enjoy someone’s tweet? Send them some money straight from the app, via the online payment processor of their choice. Simple enough. And yet, predictably, not so simple, especially for those who value their anonymity online. Within a few hours…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/07/2021

1 - Weaponized SMS Attack Goes Viral: What Millions Of Phone Users Need To Know A new SMS malware campaign capable of stealing passwords and banking credentials has started spreading like wildfire in recent weeks. So much so that mobile carriers and law enforcement agencies alike have been prompted to issue warnings about the so-called FluBot campaign. "What's unique about the campaign is that it has different kill chains depending on whether the target uses…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/06/2021

1 - Vishing — Phone Call Attacks and Scams When you think of a cyber criminal you probably think of an evil mastermind sitting behind a computer, launching sophisticated attacks over the internet. While some of today’s cyber criminals do use advanced technologies, many simply use the phone to trick their victims. There are two big advantages to using a phone: Unlike other attacks, there are fewer security technologies that can detect and stop a…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/05/2021

1 - IoT privacy and security concerns There is a famous hacking story that’s become something of an urban legend in the cyber security industry - about a casino that had its IT network infiltrated via an internet-connected fish tank. It’s said that the tank's IoT thermometer was used to access the casino’s entire system and extract data on its clientele. It's a rather extreme example of what could happen, but serves to highlight an important…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/04/2021

1 - Ford's Ever-Smarter Robots Are Speeding Up the Assembly Line IN 1913, HENRY Ford revolutionized car-making with the first moving assembly line, an innovation that made piecing together new vehicles faster and more efficient. Some hundred years later, Ford is now using artificial intelligence to eke more speed out of today’s manufacturing lines. At a Ford Transmission Plant in Livonia, Michigan, the station where robots help assemble torque converters now includes a system that uses AI to learn from previous attempts how to…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 05/03/2021

1 - European Commission finds Apple's App Store in violation of EU competition rules Apple is currently facing several antitrust battles across the US, Europe, and Australia, for allegedly exerting monopolistic power over the App Store and using it to put competitors at a disadvantage. This has even led to the creation of a "Coalition for App Fairness" to promote freedom of choice and the idea of alternative app stores in the Apple ecosystem. Following a…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 04/30/2021

1 - US arrests alleged ‘Bitcoin Fog’ boss, who is accused of laundering millions U.S. federal agents on Tuesday arrested the alleged operator of Bitcoin Fog, a cryptocurrency-obfuscation service that the dark web’s most notorious marketplaces have reportedly used to move tens of millions of dollars. Roman Sterlingov, a Russian-Swedish national, was arrested in Los Angeles and charged with money laundering for his alleged role as Bitcoin Fog’s mastermind, according to court documents. Created in…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 04/29/2021

1 - Instagram rolls out new features to help prevent cyberbullying Instagram has unveiled new tools to help combat cyberbullying and other abusive behavior on the platform – a filter that will prevent users from seeing abusive Direct Messages (DMs) and a tool to stop someone a user has blocked from contacting them from another account. “We understand the impact that abusive content – whether it’s racist, sexist, homophobic, or any other kind of abuse – can…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 04/28/2021

1 - Reverb discloses data breach exposing musicians' personal info Popular musical instrument marketplace Reverb has suffered a data breach after an unsecured database containing customer information was exposed online. Reverb is the largest online marketplace devoted to selling new, used, and vintage musical instruments and equipment. Today, Reverb customers began receiving data breach notifications stating that customer information was exposed, including customers' names, addresses, phone numbers, and email addresses. While Reverb's notification does not…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 04/27/2021

1 - Password manager Passwordstate hacked to deploy malware on customer systems A mysterious threat actor has compromised the update mechanism of enterprise password manager application Passwordstate and deployed malware on its users’ devices, most of which are enterprise customers. Click Studios, the Australian software firm behind Passwordstate, has notified its 29,000 customers earlier today via email. According to a copy of the company’s communications, obtained by Polish tech news site Niebezpiecznik, the malware-laced update was live for…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 04/26/2021

1 - Costco Issues Scam Warning Costco Wholesale Corporation is warning American internet users to be wary of more than a dozen digital scams targeting its customer base. On its website, the American multinational corporation has published screenshots of 14 "prominent fraudulent emails, texts, and posts" in which cyber-criminals are impersonating Costco. The majority of the traps use financial benefits to lure victims, promising free products, financial reimbursements, exclusive offers, cash-back rewards, and gift cards worth $50. Many try to…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 04/23/2021

1 - Researchers Secretly Tried To Add Vulnerabilities to Linux Kernel, Ended Up Getting Banned The Linux kernel is one of the largest software projects in the modern history; with a gigantic 28 millions lines of code. Contributors from all over the world and from different fields submit a large number of patches each day to the Linux kernel maintainers, so that they get reviewed before being officially merged to the official Linux kernel tree.…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 04/22/2021

1 - Internal Facebook email reveals intent to frame data scraping as ‘normalized, broad industry issue’ An internal email accidentally leaked by Facebook to a journalist has revealed the firm's intentions to frame a recent data scraping incident as "normalized" and a "broad industry issue." Facebook has recently been at the center of a data scraping controversy. Earlier this month, Hudson Rock researchers revealed that information belonging to roughly 533 million users had been posted online, including phone numbers, Facebook…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 04/21/2021

1 - EFF Will Tell Copyright Office That Consumers Should Have the Freedom to Fix, Modify Digital Devices They Own On Tuesday, April 20, and Wednesday, April 21, experts from the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) fighting copyright abuse will testify at virtual hearings held by the Copyright Office in favor of exemptions to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) so people who have purchased digital devices—from cameras and e-readers to smart TVs—can repair or modify them,…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 04/20/2021

1 - “Huge upsurge” in DDoS attacks during pandemic Researchers at Netscout have released a report analyzing the malicious internet traffic of 2020 and comparing it to the years before. Some of the results were as expected: Brute-forcing credentials and more targeting towards internet-connected devices were foreseeable and have been discussed at length. And even a record-breaking year in Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks might have been expected as it follows the upward trend over the years.…
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InfoSec News Nuggets 04/16/2021

1 - Capcom: Ransomware gang used old VPN device to breach the network Capcom has released a final update about the ransomware attack it suffered last year, detailing how the hackers gained access to the network, compromised devices, and stole personal information belonging to thousands of individuals. In early November 2020, Ragnar Locker ransomware hit the Japanese game developer and publisher, forcing Capcom to shut down portions of their network. In typical fashion for human-operated…
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