News

Cybercrims plant destructive time bomb malware in industrial .NET extensions

The Register - 5 hours 51 min ago
Multi-year wait for destruction comes to an end for mystery attackers

Security experts have helped remove malicious NuGet packages planted in 2023 that were designed to destroy systems years in advance, with some payloads not due to hit until the latter part of this decade.…

Categories: News

Microsoft's data sovereignty: Now with extra sovereignty!

The Register - 8 hours 55 min ago
Under shadow of US CLOUD Act, Redmond releases raft of services to calm customers in the EU

Microsoft is again banging the data sovereignty drum in Europe, months after admitting in a French court it couldn't guarantee that data will not be transmitted to the US government when it is legally required to do so.…

Categories: News

Bank of England says JLR's cyberattack contributed to UK's unexpectedly slower GDP growth

The Register - 9 hours 33 min ago
This kind of material economic impact from online crooks thought to be a UK-first

The Bank of England (BoE) has cited the cyberattack on Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) as one of the reasons for the country's slower-than-expected GDP growth in its latest rates decision.…

Categories: News

How TeamViewer builds enterprise trust through security-first design

The Register - 12 hours 17 min ago
What to do when even your espresso machine needs end-to-end encryption

Sponsored Feature  The security landscape is getting more perilous day by day, as both nation-state groups and financially-motivated hackers ramp up their activity.…

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Gootloader malware back for the attack, serves up ransomware

The Register - Thu, 06/11/2025 - 22:45
Move fast - miscreants compromised a domain controller in 17 hours

Gootloader JavaScript malware, commonly used to deliver ransomware, is back in action after a period of reduced activity.…

Categories: News

Cisco warns of 'new attack variant' battering firewalls under exploit for 6 months

The Register - Thu, 06/11/2025 - 18:51
Plus 2 new critical vulns - patch now

Cisco warned customers about another wave of attacks against its firewalls, which have been battered by intruders for at least six months. It also patched two critical bugs in its Unified Contact Center Express (UCCX) software that aren't under active exploitation - yet.…

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You'll never guess what the most common passwords are. Oh, wait, yes you will

The Register - Thu, 06/11/2025 - 14:00
Most of you still can't do better than 123456?

123456. admin. password. For years, the IT world has been reminding users not to rely on such predictable passwords. And yet here we are with another study finding that those sorts of quickly-guessable, universally-held-to-be-bad passwords are still the most popular ones.…

Categories: News

SonicWall fingers state-backed cyber crew for September firewall breach

The Register - Thu, 06/11/2025 - 12:26
Spies, not crooks, were behind digital heist – damage stopped at the backups, says US cybersec biz

SonicWall has blamed an unnamed, state-sponsored collective for the September break-in that saw cybercriminals rifle through a cache of firewall configuration backups.…

Categories: News

Malware-pwned laptop gifts cybercriminals Nikkei's Slack

The Register - Thu, 06/11/2025 - 10:51
Stolen creds let miscreants waltz into 17K employees' chats, spilling info on staff and partners

Japanese media behemoth Nikkei has admitted to a data breach after miscreants slipped into its internal Slack workspace, exposing the personal details of more than 17,000 employees and business partners.…

Categories: News

Why UK businesses are paying ICO millions for password mistakes you're probably making right now

The Register - Thu, 06/11/2025 - 09:00
Strongly-worded emails to staff telling them to be more careful aren't going to cut it anymore

Partner Content  UK GDPR Article 32 mandates "appropriate security measures". The ICO has defined what that means: multi-million-pound fines for password failures. The violations that trigger them? Small, familiar, and happening in your organization right now.…

Categories: News

Uncle Sam lets Google take Wiz for $32B

The Register - Wed, 05/11/2025 - 17:48
Second time's the charm for after Wiz rejected Google's $23B offer last year

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.…

Categories: News

AMD red-faced over random-number bug that kills cryptographic security

The Register - Wed, 05/11/2025 - 15:01
Local privileges required to exploit flaw in Ryzen and Epyc CPUs. Some patches available, more on the way

AMD will issue a microcode patch for a high-severity vulnerability that could weaken cryptographic keys across Epyc and Ryzen CPUs.…

Categories: News

Attackers abuse Gemini AI to develop ‘Thinking Robot’ malware and data processing agent for spying purposes

The Register - Wed, 05/11/2025 - 14:00
Meanwhile, others tried to social-engineer the chatbot itself

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.…

Categories: News

M&S pegs cyberattack cleanup costs at £136M as profits slump

The Register - Wed, 05/11/2025 - 11:54
Retailer's tech systems aren’t down anymore, but the same can’t be said for its rocky financials

Marks & Spencer says its April cyberattack will cost around £136 million ($177.2 million) in total.…

Categories: News

Famed software engineer DJB tries Fil-C… and likes what he sees

The Register - Wed, 05/11/2025 - 10:01
A ‘three-letter person’ experiments with the new type-safe C, and is impressed

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.…

Categories: News

UK agri dept spent hundreds of millions upgrading to Windows 10 – just in time for end of support

The Register - Wed, 05/11/2025 - 09:21
After a £312M upgrade to the retiring OS, Defra still has 24,000 devices to replace

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.…

Categories: News

Uncle Sam wants to scan your iris and collect your DNA, citizen or not

The Register - Tue, 04/11/2025 - 22:20
DHS rule would expand biometric collection to immigrants and some citizens linked to them

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.…

Categories: News

Russian spies pack custom malware into hidden VMs on Windows machines

The Register - Tue, 04/11/2025 - 18:53
Curly COMrades strike again

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.…

Categories: News

Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's security falls apart amid layoffs

The Register - Tue, 04/11/2025 - 17:52
Security program fails to meet federal standards as government cuts drain resources

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).…

Categories: News

Invasion of the message body snatchers! Teams flaw allowed crims to impersonate the boss

The Register - Tue, 04/11/2025 - 14:01
Check Point lifts lid on a quartet of Teams vulns that made it possible to fake the boss, forge messages, and quietly rewrite history

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.…

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