Samsung says hackers have stolen Galaxy source code
The same group behind the recent Nvidia hack is claiming responsibility for stealing the Galaxy source code.
The same group behind the recent Nvidia hack is claiming responsibility for stealing the Galaxy source code.
Two individuals have been charged with conducting ransomware attacks and $6.1 million in funds linked to ransomware payments have been seized.
It appears as if the hacker is already starting to push their ill-gotten gains through a mixing service.
Poly Network has also launched a bug bounty programme alongside several security improvements.
Thankfully, this incident was short lived.
Apex Legends suffered problems this weekend apparently tied to the older games.
The hackers claim to have 780GB of EA’s data for sale and that buyers will “have full capability of exploiting on all EA services”.
Hacking groups are using data scrapped from LinkedIn to build and execute spearphishing campaigns.
According to The Washington Post, the Russian government got hackers to breach a handful of US government agencies.
The treasure trove contains email usernames and passwords of CEOs, CFOs and even presidents of companies.
Why create a new tool when you could just use one that exists and is likely flying under the radar already.
If Garmin has paid the ransom and Evil Corp is behind WastedLocker, Garmin may have violated US sanctions.