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SpaceX

Data breach

Dark Web

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SpaceX Engineer discloses all insider information

James Roland Jones, a space engineer who shares critical insider information on the dark web faces a heavy penalty

30-Mar-2021
2 min read

No content available.

Related Articles

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WhatsApp

Trustwave SpiderLabs exposes a sophisticated Android banking Trojan, "SpyNote," ...

Cyber threats exploit human trust. Trustwave SpiderLabs has uncovered a new, highly effective distribution campaign for the **SpyNote Android banking Trojan**. Masquerading as a critical "WhatsApp Update," this malware leverages the platform's immense credibility to bypass user skepticism and deploy a full-featured spying and financial-theft tool directly on victim devices. The campaign, detailed in a recent threat intelligence report, demonstrates a shift from less-personalized distribution methods to highly targeted social engineering, marking a significant evolution in the mobile threat landscape. #### **A Multi-Stage Social Engineering Assault** The attack begins not with a technical exploit, but with a persuasive lie. Victims receive a message, typically via SMS or another platform, urging them to update WhatsApp by clicking a provided link. This sense of urgency and the use of a trusted brand name is the critical first step in bypassing initial defenses. 1. **The Lure:** The victim is directed to a phishing page that convincingly mimics the official WhatsApp website, complete with branding and a prominent "Update" button. 2. **The Payload:** Clicking the button downloads a malicious APK file (`api[.]whatsapp[.]com/update_whatsapp.apk`). This file is the SpyNote banking Trojan, digitally signed with a seemingly legitimate certificate to evade basic checks. The user must enable "Install from Unknown Sources," a step the social engineering context makes them more likely to accept. 3. **The Permissions Grab:** Once installed, the app, disguised with a generic "Settings" icon and name, requests extensive Android permissions. Crucially, it abuses the Accessibility Service—a powerful feature intended to aid users with disabilities—to grant itself additional permissions without user interaction, effectively neutering Android's standard security prompts. #### **Beyond Simple Banking Theft** SpyNote (detected by SpiderLabs as `Android.SpyNote`) is not a simple information stealer; it's a modular RAT (Remote Access Trojan) with a comprehensive suite of spying capabilities designed for persistent control and data exfiltration. Key malicious functionalities include: * **Overlay Attacks:** The Trojan dynamically injects fake login screens over legitimate banking and social media applications, capturing credentials in real-time as the user enters them. * **SMS Interception & Theft:** It can read, send, and block SMS messages. This is critical for intercepting one-time passwords (OTPs) and two-factor authentication (2FA) codes used by banks. * **Call Redirection & Recording:** The malware can redirect incoming calls and record both sides of a conversation, providing attackers with a direct audio intelligence feed. * **Keylogging:** By abusing the Accessibility Service, it can log every keystroke made on the infected device, capturing usernames, passwords, and private messages. * **Remote Control (RAT):** Attackers can remotely trigger these functions, access the device's file system, and even use the camera and microphone, turning the smartphone into a full-fledged surveillance device. * **Payload Update Capability:** The malware can communicate with its Command and Control (C2) server to download and execute additional malicious payloads, ensuring its functionality can evolve post-infection. #### **Why This Campaign is So Effective** This campaign's success lies in its psychological precision. By hijacking the WhatsApp brand—a service used by billions for personal and professional communication—attackers create a powerful cognitive bias. The fear of missing out on critical updates or functionality overrides the natural caution associated with installing unknown apps. Furthermore, the use of a digitally signed APK and the abuse of legitimate Android features like the Accessibility Service represent a "living-off-the-land" technique for mobile malware, making it harder for traditional security solutions to distinguish malicious from legitimate behavior. #### **Mitigation & Defense Recommendations** For enterprises and individuals, a proactive, defense-in-depth strategy is essential. **For End-Users:** * **Never install apps from unofficial sources.** Only use the Google Play Store or official enterprise app stores. * **Be inherently skeptical of unsolicited update links,** especially those received via SMS or email. Navigate to the official app store directly to check for updates. * **Scrutinize app permissions critically.** If an app, especially one claiming to be a simple utility, requests Accessibility Service permissions or SMS access, it is a major red flag. * **Keep "Install Unknown Apps" disabled for all browsers and messaging apps.** **For Enterprises (via EMM/MDM):** * Enforce policies that block the installation of applications from unknown sources on all corporate-managed devices. * Implement application allow-listing to restrict which apps can run on enterprise devices. * Deploy a modern Mobile Threat Defense (MTD) solution capable of detecting malicious behavior, such as the abuse of Accessibility Services and the presence of overlay attacks. * Conduct ongoing user awareness training focused on mobile social engineering tactics. The SpyNote campaign is a potent indicator that mobile banking Trojans are becoming more sophisticated, not just in their code, but in their delivery. In an era where the smartphone is a digital vault, vigilance is the first and most important line of defense.

loading..   19-Nov-2025
loading..   4 min read
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Cloudflare

Cloudflare global outage root cause analysis. Configuration error triggered casc...

Imagine every fifth website you use—from banking to social media—simultaneously vanishing. On November 18, 2025, that digital nightmare became reality. A catastrophic Cloudflare outage didn’t just cause errors; it triggered a **multi-billion dollar global digital seizure**, exposing the terrifying fragility of our hyper-centralized internet. For three hours, the **digital heartbeat of the global economy flatlined**. This wasn’t a hack; it was a **catastrophic internal chain reaction**—a silent bug triggered by a routine file update, spiraling into a worldwide web-wide collapse. ### One File That Broke the Modern Internet The crisis began at 11:20 UTC. Deep within Cloudflare's core infrastructure, a configuration file for its advanced Bot Management system—a critical shield against cyber threats—swelled beyond its designed capacity. This single file, bloated with data, crashed a primary software system. The result? A **digital pandemic** that spread across Cloudflare's global network in minutes. Their own internal controls were locked out, turning a technical failure into an uncontrollable cascade. The internet's most trusted guardian had accidentally become its single point of failure. ### Your Daily Digital Life, Gone The outage didn't discriminate. It was a **universal digital blackout** that touched every corner of the online world, making its impact instantly, virally relatable: * **Your AI Brain Vanished:** ChatGPT went dark. Claude AI was unresponsive. The very tools reshaping our workflow were suddenly useless. * **Your Social Feed Went Blank:** X (Twitter) errored out, silencing global conversation. * **Your Shopping Cart Evaporated:** Shopify stores disappeared, freezing e-commerce at the point of sale. * **Your Lunch Was Canceled:** DoorDash and Uber Eats apps failed, leaving orders and drivers in limbo. * **Your Commute Was Halted:** New Jersey Transit's systems were impacted, stranding passengers. * **Your Playlist Died:** Spotify streams cut out. League of Legends and Valorant servers kicked players offline. This wasn't a list of affected services; it was the **erasure of daily digital routines** for millions. ### Billions Evaporated in Hours The real shockwave was economic. As screens flickered with error messages, the financial bleed began in real-time. Expert analysts projected a jaw-dropping loss of **$5 to $15 billion for every hour** the internet remained broken. This wasn't just an outage; it was one of the most expensive infrastructure failures in history, a stark reminder that the "cloud" is, in fact, a very physical and vulnerable economic engine. ### A Fragile Digital House of Cards The November 18th crash is a **deafening wake-up call**. It proves that our move to a convenience-driven, centralized web has created a house of cards. When one player like Cloudflare, which powers an estimated 20% of all websites, stumbles, the entire digital world falls. The internet recovered, but the trust in its resilience is forever fractured. The question now echoing through boardrooms and governments is no longer *if* this will happen again, but how we can rebuild a web that isn't forever one misstep away from its next global blackout.

loading..   18-Nov-2025
loading..   3 min read
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Clop Ransomware

Logitech breach: Clop gang exploits Oracle EBS zero-day (CVE-2025-61882) in a su...

Logitech International S.A. has filed an 8-K with the SEC [confirming](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1032975/000103297525000085/logi-20251114.htm) a significant data breach resulting from the exploitation of a zero-day vulnerability [CVE-2025-61882](https://www.secureblink.com/cyber-security-news/oracle-e-business-suite-hit-by-zero-day-exploits-and-cl-0-p-attacks) in a third-party Oracle E-Business Suite (EBS) instance. The Clop extortion group successfully exfiltrated approximately 1.8 terabytes of data. Critically, this was a pure data theft extortion attack; no ransomware was deployed, and operational systems remained uncompromised. #### **Attack Vector: Exploitation of Oracle E-Business Suite CVE** The initial compromise was not achieved through a weakness in Logitech's perimeter defenses but via a sophisticated supply chain attack. * **Vulnerability:** CVE-2025-61882, a critical pre-authentication vulnerability in the Oracle EBS suite. * **Exploit Mechanism:** The flaw allowed unauthenticated remote attackers to execute arbitrary PL/SQL code on the vulnerable EBS instance through a crafted HTTP request, bypassing standard authentication mechanisms. * **Privilege Escalation:** Once inside the EBS environment, the threat actors leveraged built-in EBS functions and standard database permissions to pivot and access connected file shares and databases, leading to the mass data exfiltration. #### **Threat Actor TTPs: Clop's Focused Extortion Model** The Clop group [demonstrated](https://www.secureblink.com/threat-research/clop-ransomware) a highly focused Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures (TTP) playbook, diverging from their traditional ransomware deployments. * **Technique:** Data Theft for Extortion (MITRE ATT&CK TA0010). * **Procedure:** After establishing a foothold via the EBS exploit, the actors conducted reconnaissance, identified file repositories containing business-critical data (employee, customer, supplier information), and staged the data for exfiltration over a period of days, likely using encrypted channels to blend with legitimate traffic. * **Objective:** The absence of ransomware deployment indicates a strategic shift towards "low-and-slow" data exfiltration to maximize the amount of data stolen while minimizing the chance of immediate detection, relying solely on the threat of public data leakage for extortion. #### **Impact Analysis & Data Scope** Logitech's containment and forensic analysis provided a clear, albeit substantial, scope of impact. * **Data Exfiltrated:** ~1.8 TB of structured and unstructured data from systems interconnected with the compromised EBS instance. * **Data Content:** Corporate data involving employee, consumer, customer, and supplier information. Logitech's assertion that sensitive PII (National IDs, payment card data) was not compromised indicates these datasets were logically segregated and not resident on the impacted EBS application and its directly accessible storage volumes. * **Business Impact:** **None** to product operations, manufacturing, or core services, as the attack was contained within a specific business application environment and did not touch industrial control or product delivery systems. #### **Root Cause & Security Failure** The primary failure was a shortcoming in **Third-Party Risk Management (TPRM)**. While Logitech’s direct infrastructure may have been robust, its security posture was intrinsically tied to the patch management cycle of a critical vendor (Oracle). The "patch gap"—the window between a vendor releasing a patch and an enterprise applying it—was exploited by a highly agile threat actor. This incident underscores that the attack surface for modern enterprises extends far beyond their own IP ranges to include all externally managed business applications.

loading..   17-Nov-2025
loading..   3 min read