On the morning of January 11, the Federal Aviation Administration halted all airline takeoffs in the U.S. because of a glitch in a software system critical to flight safety. "There is no evidence of a cyberattack at this point," said the White House press secretary.
Those are fair questions, given that in 2015 it took the FAA two months to disclose that hackers had planted malware in one of its computer networks. The federal government keeps tight wraps on what it knows about threats to American businesses and individuals.
Hackers push malware via Google search ads for VLC, 7-Zip, CCleaner
Soon, Alex found that their account at the OpenSea NFT marketplace had also been compromised and a different wallet was listed as the owner of one of their digital assets.
“I knew at that moment it was all gone. Everything. All my crypto and NFTs ripped from me,” NFT God says in the thread .
Fox News host credits Bitcoin pump to ransomware hackers
Fox News host Tucker Carlson theorized that recent bullish market moves were due to the U.S. government buying Bitcoin to pay ransomware attackers.
On Jan. 11, the FAA halted nationwide departures, delaying thousands of flights, due to a “computer outage.
“Our preliminary work has traced the outage to a damaged database file. At this time, there is no evidence of a cyber attack.”
FTX hackers stole $415M in cryptocurrency in transfers
Unidentified hackers stole a whopping $415 million in cryptocurrency from FTX's already depleted holdings in the days after its bankruptcy, the doomed platform's caretakers admitted in a court filing Tuesday.
In a bankruptcy court presentation titled "Maximizing FTX Recoveries," officials say they have identified at least $323 million in digital assets from Bahamas-based FTX.com and $90 million from FTX's US operation that disappeared from the books via "unauthorized third-party transfers."
Ukraine links data-wiping attack on news agency to Russian hackers
"According to preliminary data, provided by CERT-UA specialists, the attack have caused certain destructive effects on the agency's information infrastructure, but the threat has been swiftly localized nonetheless," the State Service of Special Communications and Information Protection (SSSCIP) ...
'Hack the Pentagon' Hackers Will Literally Hack the Pentagon
The next iteration of the "Hack the Pentagon" bug bounty program is getting literal, with a new list of targets for white hat hackers pegged to the network controlling the U.S. Department of Defense's headquarters building.
The military has run periodic bug bounty programs since initiating "Hack the Pentagon" in 2016. Participants have revealed holes in the F-15 tactical air fighter and advanced secure hardware architectures.
Hackers Can Exploit GE Historian Vulnerabilities for ICS Espionage, Disruption | SecurityWeek.Com
Vulnerabilities found in GE's Proficy Historian product could be exploited by hackers for espionage and to cause damage and disruption in industrial environments.
The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) informed organizations about these vulnerabilities on Tuesday, when industrial cybersecurity firm Claroty, whose researchers discovered the flaws, also released a blog post detailing the findings.
Hackers Target Norton Password Manager, Access 8,000 User Accounts | PCMag
NortonLifeLock began notifying customers about the intrusions earlier this month, according (Opens in a new window) to a data breach notice sent to the Office of the Vermont Attorney General. The cybersecurity provider became aware of the problem on Dec.
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Every day of the year, hackers unleash a stream of major attacks against government agencies, companies and individ… https://t.co/UTtHlM6m7f Newsweek (from New York, NY) Wed Jan 18 12:02:26 +0000 2023
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