The Midnight Blizzard cyberspies used compromised websites to trick users into authorizing devices they controlled.
The post Amazon Disrupts Russian Hacking Campaign Targeting Microsoft Users appeared first on SecurityWeek.
The Midnight Blizzard cyberspies used compromised websites to trick users into authorizing devices they controlled.
The post Amazon Disrupts Russian Hacking Campaign Targeting Microsoft Users appeared first on SecurityWeek.
Google TAG publishes evidence showing identical or striking similarities between exploits used by Russia’s APT29 and commercial spyware vendors.
The post Google Catches Russian APT Reusing Exploits From Spyware Merchants NSO Group, Intellexa appeared first on SecurityWeek.
TeamViewer has confirmed that the Russian cyberespionage group APT29 appears to be behind the recent hack.
The post TeamViewer Hack Officially Attributed to Russian Cyberspies appeared first on SecurityWeek.
Shockwaves from the Russian government’s hack of Microsoft’s corporate infrastructure continue to spread as the victim pool widens.
The post Microsoft Alerts More Customers to Email Theft in Expanding Midnight Blizzard Hack appeared first on SecurityWeek.
The US government says Midnight Blizzard’s compromise of Microsoft corporate email accounts “presents a grave and unacceptable risk to federal agencies.”
The post US Government on High Alert as Russian Hackers Steal Critical Correspondence From Microsoft appeared first on SecurityWeek.
Microsoft says the Midnight Blizzard APT group may still be poking around its internal network after stealing source code, spying on emails.
The post Microsoft Says Russian Gov Hackers Stole Source Code After Spying on Executive Emails appeared first on SecurityWeek.
US government and allies expose TTPs used by notorious Russian hacking teams and warn of the targeting of dormant cloud accounts.
The post Russian Cyberspies Targeting Cloud Infrastructure via Dormant Accounts appeared first on SecurityWeek.