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Apple confirms iPhone, Mac affected by Meltdown-Spectre vulnerabilities

2018-01-05
On: January 5, 2018
In: Vulnerabilities

The iPhone maker has confirmed all Mac systems and devices running iOS are affected by the vulnerabilities, but also said there are currently no known exploits. Apple has issued a statement regardingRead More →

Privacy of location tracking device owners threatened by ‘Trackmageddon’ flaws

2018-01-04
On: January 4, 2018
In: Mobile Security, Vulnerabilities

A slew of online services used to manage GPS- and GSM-based location tracking devices have been found vulnerable to flaws that could allow attackers to hijack these devices and revealRead More →

Google Apps Script vulnerability could have opened the door for malware

2018-01-04
On: January 4, 2018
In: Malware, Vulnerabilities

No user interaction required – and the exploit could’ve been used to distribute any form of malware. A vulnerability in Google Apps Script could have allowed attackers to use GoogleRead More →

Meltdown and Spectre vulnerabilities bring the computing apocalypse, and yes, you are screwed

2018-01-04
On: January 4, 2018
In: Vulnerabilities

Earlier today, we reported on some shocking news — there is a serious vulnerability that affects Intel processors. To make matters worse, patching that vulnerability — now known as “Meltdown” —Read More →

Starbucks Customer Computers Hacked to Mine Bitcoin over Public WiFi

2018-01-03
On: January 3, 2018
In: Incidents

Hackers in Argentina found a way to exploit computers over public WiFi and use them to mine bitcoin. How do we stay secure as public internet access becomes more common?Read More →

This Vulnerability in phpMyAdmin Lets An Attacker Perform DROP TABLE With A Single Click!

2018-01-02
On: January 2, 2018
In: Incidents, Vulnerabilities

Most of you are familiar about Cross Site Request Forgery (CSRF) vulnerability, it is one of the most common vulnerabilities; it was listed in OWASP Top 10 – 2013. Previously,Read More →

Web Trackers are now Exploiting Password Managers to Track User Behavior

2018-01-02
On: January 2, 2018
In: Vulnerabilities

Password Managers have been around for quite some time, and most of us rely on them for managing our passwords across several websites. Services like LastPass, 1Pass, and KeePass haveRead More →

PROCESS DOPPELGÄNGING – GIVING HARD TIME TO AV VENDORS

2018-01-02
On: January 2, 2018
In: Vulnerabilities

Recently security researcher’s from enSilo group presented new evasion technique called Process Doppelgänging at Blackhat Europe-2017. This technique bypasses most popular Antivirus, NGFW and EDR solutions present in the market. This techniqueRead More →

LIVERPOOL MEXICO HIJACKED

Liverpool Mexico website hijacks visitor computers/mobiles to mine cryptocurrency

2017-12-30
On: December 30, 2017
In: Important, Incidents, Malware, Mobile Security, Vulnerabilities

  As the values of the largest cryptocurrencies have multiplied, so too have reports of digital-currency miners stealing resources to increase the profitability of their operations. Few weeks back, we reportedRead More →

ATMs running on Windows XP in Russia hacked by pressing ‘Shift’ key 5 times

2017-12-30
On: December 30, 2017
In: Incidents

Security vulnerability found in ATM machines running Windows XP in Russia. All ATMs that are still running on Microsoft’s 16-year-old Windows XP operating system are at the risk of getting hackedRead More →

OSPF (Open Shortest Path First) Routing Protocol & Its Stages

2017-12-30
On: December 30, 2017
In: Data Security

OSPF (Open Shortest Path First) is a link state routing Protocol, a type of the Internal Gateway Protocol (IGP), which was designed to scale and support more extensive networks. To findRead More →

TCP Bind Shell in Assembly (ARM 32-bit)

2017-12-29
On: December 29, 2017
In: Incidents

In this tutorial, you will learn how to write TCP bind shellcode that is free of null bytes and can be used as shellcode for exploitation. When I talk aboutRead More →

How Memory Leaks Happen in a Java Application

2017-12-29
On: December 29, 2017
In: Incidents

Introduction to Memory Leaks In Java Apps One of the core benefits of Java is the JVM, which is an out-of-the-box memory management. Essentially, we can create objects and the Java Garbage Collector willRead More →

Russia Might Be Hacking FBI And Stealing Fingerprints Of Millions, Says Report

2017-12-28
On: December 28, 2017
In: Incidents

If a mere speculation is to be believed, the biometric data of millions of Americans could be at the risk of being compromised by Russian hackers. They could “even compromiseRead More →

HACKERS CAN RICKROLL THOUSANDS OF SONOS AND BOSE SPEAKERS OVER THE INTERNET

2017-12-28
On: December 28, 2017
In: Incidents

PERHAPS YOU’VE BEEN hearing strange sounds in your home—ghostly creaks and moans, random Rick Astley tunes, Alexa commands issued in someone else’s voice. If so, you haven’t necessarily lost your mind.Read More →

The Wildly Popular Christmas Game That Got Mistaken for Spyware

2017-12-27
On: December 27, 2017
In: Malware

How ‘Elf Bowling,’ the incredibly popular viral game from 1999, became an early victim of what we might now call “fake news.” I know this sounds pretty crazy and dangerous,Read More →

THE WIFI REPEATER YOU PROBABLY HAVE ON YOUR BENCH

2017-12-27
On: December 27, 2017
In: Incidents

Few things are as frustrating as a WiFi signal that drops in and out. On a public network it is bad enough but at home? Even if you can liveRead More →

BadRabbit Ransomware Decided to Avoid One Antivirus Vendor

2017-12-26
On: December 26, 2017
In: Malware

Security researchers are noticing something curious about Tuesday’s BadRabbit ransomware outbreak. Apparently, the malicious code is built to avoid encrypting PCs running antivirus from a certain vendor. Researchers at FireEye noticed the issueRead More →

Sednit update: How Fancy Bear Spent the Year

2017-12-26
On: December 26, 2017
In: Incidents

The Sednit group — also known as Strontium, APT28, Fancy Bear or Sofacy — is a group of attackers operating since 2004, if not earlier, and whose main objective is to stealRead More →

CVE-2017-7344 Fortinet FortiClient Windows privilege escalation at logon

2017-12-25
On: December 25, 2017
In: Vulnerabilities

A setting, disabled by default, enables FortiClient on the logon screen to allow users to connect to a VPN profile before logon. An attacker, with physical, or remote (e.g. throughRead More →

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