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UK to require ID or face scan before you can make social media accounts

Bleeping Computer - 2 hodiny 27 min zpět
Opening a new social media account in the UK will soon mean proving you're over 16 with an ID upload or a facial age scan, under a government ban on under-16s taking effect in spring 2027. Security experts warn the age checks are easy to circumvent and create new data-breach risks. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

FreeRDP 3.27 Raises the Baseline for Secure Remote Access

LinuxSecurity.com - 2 hodiny 33 min zpět
Remote access tools do not need dramatic new features to improve security. Sometimes the more useful change is quieter, like stronger defaults that make weak encryption harder to use by accident.
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

SimpleHelp Authentication Bypass Exposes Remote Access Security Risk

LinuxSecurity.com - 2 hodiny 43 min zpět
Remote support platforms sit close to the systems attackers want most: administrator workflows, technician accounts, and managed endpoints. That is why the SimpleHelp OIDC flaw is more serious than a routine authentication bypass vulnerability. For organizations running these platforms on Linux-based infrastructure, the risk is compounded by the ease with which these services are deployed and integrated into larger management stacks.
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

GhostTree Attack Abused Recursive Windows Junctions to Hide Malware

Bleeping Computer - 2 hodiny 48 min zpět
GhostTree uses recursive NTFS junctions to generate vast numbers of valid Windows file paths. Varonis explains how the technique could cause Microsoft Defender folder scans to never complete, leaving malware undetected. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Cisco SD-WAN Vulnerability: Why Security Starts With the Management Plane

LinuxSecurity.com - 3 hodiny 1 min zpět
For those of us who live and breathe Linux and open-source infrastructure, the "management plane" is usually just a collection of familiar tools—SSH, APIs, and centralized orchestration. But in the world of proprietary enterprise networking, the management plane is often a black box. Cisco’s latest SD-WAN issue serves as a stark reminder that even when these proprietary systems rely on Linux components under the hood, their centralized nature makes them the ultimate high-value target.
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

FTC warns of record $3.5 billion losses to imposter scams in 2025

Bleeping Computer - 3 hodiny 23 min zpět
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) warned that Americans lost $3.5 billion to imposter scams in 2025, with reported losses nearly tripling since 2020. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

New Rokarolla Android Malware Steals PINs, SMS Codes, and Crypto Wallet Funds

The Hacker News - 3 hodiny 55 min zpět
Security researchers at Zimperium's zLabs have documented a new Android banking trojan, Rokarolla, that targets 217 banking and cryptocurrency apps and packs 137 remote commands. Together, they give an operator near-total control of an infected phone: it lifts lock-screen PINs, reads and sends SMS, rewrites the clipboard to redirect crypto payments, and switches off Google Play Swati Khandelwalhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/[email protected]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Survey: 94% of Incidents Involve Anonymized Infrastructure. Teams Are Still Reactive

The Hacker News - 5 hodin 36 min zpět
Security teams have never had more IP data at their disposal. Every day, analysts ingest enrichment feeds, geolocation data, reputation scores, telemetry, and threat intelligence from a growing ecosystem of vendors and platforms. Yet despite this abundance of information, many organizations continue to face a fundamental challenge: sifting through the noise to understand who is behind an IP [email protected]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Critical Copilot vulnerability allowed hackers to seal 2FA code from users

Ars Technica - 5 hodin 50 min zpět

Last Tuesday, Microsoft patched a vulnerability it rated as max critical in its M365 Copilot AI platform. On Monday, the researchers who discovered the vulnerability and reported it to Microsoft revealed how their proof-of-concept exploit could retrieve 2FA codes and other sensitive data from emails accessible to Copilot.

Microsoft and other LLM providers have been unable to prevent their products from complying with malicious requests to reveal data. The root cause: AI bots are unable to distinguish between instructions provided by users and those snuck into third-party content the models are summarizing, drafting responses to, or using to perform other actions on behalf of the user. With no way to secure this crucial boundary, Microsoft and its peers are left to erect complicated and ad hoc guardrails designed to rein in the consequences of this incurable gullibility.

Jumping over guardrails

One guardrail built into Copilot and most other LLMs prevents them from submitting web forms, sending emails, and taking similar actions that can be used to exfiltrate data from the user. To work around this, LLM hackers turned to markup language, which, among other things, allows users to add formatting elements such as headings, lists, and links to text without the need for HTML tags. Another workaround is to wrap sensitive data inside HTML tags such as <img> and <form>. In either case, a web request showing the data hits the attacker’s web server, where the secret information is captured in logs.

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CISA warns of another cPanel plugin flaw exploited in attacks

Bleeping Computer - 6 hodin 18 min zpět
The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has given U.S. government agencies three days to secure their servers against an actively exploited vulnerability (CVE-2026-54420) in the LiteSpeed cPanel user-end plugin. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Attackers Exploit Three Fortinet FortiSandbox Flaws, One Patched Last Week

The Hacker News - 6 hodin 35 min zpět
Bad actors are exploiting multiple security vulnerabilities in Fortinet FortiSandbox, according to threat intelligence firm Defused Cyber. In a post shared on X, the company said it has observed exploitation of CVE-2026-39813, CVE-2026-39808, and CVE-2026-25089 over the past 24 hours. CVE-2026-39813 (CVSS score: 9.1) refers to a path traversal vulnerability in FortiSandbox JRPC API that could Ravie Lakshmananhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/[email protected]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Ransomware gang abuses Microsoft Teams relays to hide malicious traffic

Bleeping Computer - 6 hodin 47 min zpět
DragonForce ransomware used a custom malware named 'Backdoor.Turn' to hide command-and-control traffic inside Microsoft Teams relay infrastructure. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

China-Linked SprySOCKS Backdoor Expands to Windows with Driver-Based Stealth

The Hacker News - 7 hodin 1 min zpět
Cybersecurity researchers have flagged two previously undocumented Windows variants of what was believed to be a Linux-only backdoor called SprySOCKS. "The Windows variants discovered are internally marked as WIN_DRV and WIN_PLUS," ESET said in a report shared with The Hacker News. "Both come with a hard-coded C&C [command-and-control] configuration and support communication over TCP, UDP, Ravie Lakshmananhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/[email protected]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Anthropic’s new privacy policy offers US consumers a way around the Fable ban

Computerworld.com [Hacking News] - 7 hodin 1 min zpět

Anthropic’s apparent inability to identify which of its users are foreign nationals has led to some collateral damage from a US export ban on its most powerful AI models — but there is a way around it, at least for some.

On Friday, the US government ordered Anthropic to suspend access to Fable and Mythos, the new AI models it had introduced just a few days earlier, to all foreign nationals, citing national security reasons.

While the drafters of the US order may have had sovereignty in mind, they ended up making it an identity management problem.

“The net effect of this order is that we must abruptly disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all our customers to ensure compliance,” Anthropic said in a blog post commenting on the order, implying that it was unable to distinguish between foreign nationals and US citizens in its user base.

That’s likely the case today, but for its consumer customers, an update to its privacy policy, introduced last week and taking effect on July 8, gives it a new option: asking them for government ID.

The section of the policy on collection of personal data contains a new provision under the heading “Personal data you provide to us directly,” saying:

  • Verification Data: In certain circumstances, we may ask you to verify your age or identity. If you choose to do so, data we will collect includes, depending on the method: an image of your government-issued identity document and the information appearing on it (such as your ID number and date of birth); your image in photo or video form, facial geometry templates (which may be considered ‘biometric data’ in some jurisdictions); and the result of the verification (for example, whether your age meets the applicable threshold).

If the government ban on foreign access to Fable and Mythos continues, that would give Anthropic the option of opening access to users willing to submit a scan of their identity document, provided that it contained proof of their US citizenship. That would be the case for US passports — and also for citizens’ driving licenses issued by some US states along the country’s Northern border, which issue so-called enhanced driving licenses indicating the holders’ nationality.

Enterprise users most likely to benefit from the power of the new AI models, though, will have to hope Anthropic finds some other way out of the current impasse.

The article originally appeared on CIO.

Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Critical Fortinet FortiSandbox flaws now exploited in attacks

Bleeping Computer - 7 hodin 46 min zpět
Attackers are now exploiting several critical vulnerabilities in Fortinet's FortiSandbox cyber threat detection platform, according to threat intelligence company Defused. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Dozens of malicious wallpapers found on Steam Workshop: gamers’ accounts at risk

Kaspersky Securelist - 8 hodin 5 min zpět

Since late 2025, malware has been spreading rapidly through the Steam Workshop, the gaming platform’s built-in service for players to create and share custom content. The attackers are primarily targeting gamers in China and Russia, aiming to hijack their accounts. To pull this off, they are exploiting Wallpaper Engine – a popular live wallpaper app available on Steam – specifically leveraging its Workshop sharing feature. The malware is hidden inside the wallpaper packages users share with one another. Running one of these compromised wallpapers can lead to a stolen Steam account or leave the victim’s system infected with backdoors or crypto miners.

What is Wallpaper Engine?

Wallpaper Engine is an app that allows you to put animated wallpapers on your desktop. It’s available for both Windows and Android, though our investigation focused strictly on the Windows version. Thanks to a massive Steam community, the app is quite popular, boasting around 100,000 daily active users and nearly a million reviews. It comes with a built-in editor so users can create their own designs, and it supports a few different wallpaper types:

  • Videos: MP4, WebM, and other common video formats
  • Scenes: interactive wallpapers built inside the app’s own editor
  • Web pages: HTML pages powered by JavaScript and CSS, which can also include audio and video elements
  • Applications: active windows from third-party Windows-compatible software that Wallpaper Engine sets as the user’s desktop background

That last type, application wallpapers, is where things get risky, because these are essentially standalone programs. They can be anything from mini-games you play right on your desktop, to planners, calendars, system monitors, or widgets tracking your CPU or GPU usage.

Application wallpapers: a built-in security risk

The whole concept of “application wallpapers” essentially allows foreign code to be run directly on your computer. Cybercriminals took note of this feature and started embedding malware right into these types of wallpapers. Because Wallpaper Engine relies on Steam Workshop for content sharing, anyone can create a wallpaper and publish it for the community to download and install for free. Naturally, this setup is a magnet for bad actors.

We discovered dozens of these malicious application wallpapers floating around Steam Workshop, and each one had already been downloaded thousands – or even tens of thousands – of times.

When we analyzed them, we caught two different methods the attackers were using to spread their malware:

  • An archive containing the executable wallpaper alongside the malicious files. This payload usually consisted of compromised EXE files, DLLs, or malicious scripts.
  • In other cases, attackers threw a curveball by hiding the malware inside a password-protected archive. Either the victim was tricked into typing the password, or a script handled it automatically. The attackers would hide the password in plain sight – either right in the archive’s name or inside a JSON configuration installed along with other wallpaper files. For all the other variations, the payload triggered automatically when the user selected and applied the wallpaper.
Inside an infected game wallpaper

Main screen of the wallpaper application

On the surface, this wallpaper sample (above) we uncovered in December 2025 looks completely harmless. Once launched, there’s absolutely nothing to trigger your suspicion. The built-in game boots up flawlessly, runs smoothly, and the desktop controls work exactly as they should. But behind the scenes, a full-blown infection is underway. Within just a few minutes, a user might suddenly realize their Steam account has been hijacked, or find their computer crippled by malware, with their files being encrypted by ransomware or their system performance tanking because of a hidden crypto miner.

How the malware deploys

Once the game wallpaper launches, it drops a backdoor file called Synaptics.exe (part of the DarkKomet malware family) straight into the victim’s system. At the same time, an executable named ._cache_GAME1.exe fires up to boot the actual game, NTRaholic.

But that ._cache_GAME1.exe module is doing double duty. It simultaneously installs a custom version of a system library called AggregatorHost.dll with a payload inside. This modified library has one main objective: track down the Steam app on the computer and hunt for account credentials.

Looking for the Steam app

Next, the modified library hijacks the user’s live Steam session.

Hijacking the Steam session

After that, the compromised AggregatorHost.dll sends all the collected data to a server controlled by the hackers at hxxp://120.48.156[.]17/ey.php. Once the attackers have control of that active session, they can use the victim’s account to upload even more malicious wallpapers to Steam Workshop.

Attribution and victims

The game wallpaper described above is just one flavor of the many variations we uncovered during our research. By weaponizing the application wallpaper feature, bad actors have successfully distributed almost every type of malware under the sun – from popular infostealers and backdoors to crypto miners and botnet loaders.

Because the range of tools being used is so diverse, we suspect this isn’t the work of a single mastermind. Instead, it looks like multiple scattered, independent hacking groups are all jumping on the same trend. Right now, the primary targets are gamers in China. The wallpaper art styles and titles are tailored specifically to them, and the data backs it up: our security systems caught a staggering 89% of the malicious download attempts happening right there. That said, there’s absolutely nothing stopping these attackers from pivoting and launching a similar campaign in any other part of the world. Russia comes in second place for total downloads at 5.5%, followed by a smattering of other countries and territories: Singapore (1.4%), Hong Kong (0.9%), Germany (0.9%), Vietnam (0.9%), India (0.5%), and Canada (0.5%).

Malicious app wallpaper downloads by region

How to stay safe

Our investigation proves that even trusted platforms like the Steam Workshop aren’t completely safe from malware. In most cases, we caught old, familiar threats such as DarkKomet, the Lumma and Vidar infostealers, and the RenEngine loader. Kaspersky solutions can easily spot and block all of these payloads, no matter how clever the packaging is, thanks to our proactive security layers. Here are some of the specific threat detection verdicts assigned to the objects we discovered during our research:

  • HEUR:Trojan-PSW.Win32.gen
  • HEUR:Trojan-PSW.Win32.Python.gen
  • HEUR:Backdoor.Win32.DarkKomet
  • Trojan-Dropper.Python.Agent
  • HEUR:Trojan-Ransom.Win32.Gen.gen
  • PDM:Trojan.Win32.Generic.

By the time this post went live, the Steam team had already scrubbed the identified malicious wallpapers and links from the platform. However, given how frequently new infected wallpapers keep popping up on the Steam Workshop, you shouldn’t rely on Steam to catch everything. It’s highly recommended to run an antivirus scan on these types of wallpapers before you actually apply them.

Indicators of compromise

MD5

C2 servers

Malicious wallpapers

Windows version of SprySOCKS Linux malware used to attack govt orgs

Bleeping Computer - 8 hodin 6 min zpět
Windows variants for the SprySOCKS Linux malware have been used in attacks targeting government organizations in at least four countries. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Fake Microsoft Alerts Used to Deploy North Korean NarwhalRAT Malware

The Hacker News - 8 hodin 1 min zpět
The North Korean state-sponsored hacking group known as ScarCruft (aka APT37) has been observed using spear-phishing messages impersonating Microsoft Account security notifications to deliver malware called NarwhalRAT. "The attack email contained a message impersonating an MS account security alert," the Genians Security Center (GSC) said. "It was designed to create concern over possible Ravie Lakshmananhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/[email protected]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Q&A: A look at forward-deployed engineers, AWS style

Computerworld.com [Hacking News] - 10 hodin 6 min zpět

Hot AI companies can’t stop talking about forward-deployed engineers (FDEs), which are now very much in vogue. 

FDEs, in case you haven’t heard, are hired by companies looking (hoping?) to successfully deploy AI tools and services. It’s one of the hotter professions in a world still trying to understand the impact of AI on careers.

So, what exactly are FDEs — are they techy lone rangers like the ones OpenAI, Google and Microsoft are hiring? Turns out it’s not so much about individual engineers who swoop in to design and roll out AI deployments; it’s more about a team of engineers working together at customer sites.

At least, that’s the view at Amazon Web Services (AWS).

In fact, according to Taimur Rashid, managing director of the AWS Generative AI Innovation Center, the FDE concept pre-dates the current generative AI (genAI) gold rush. The same kinds of engineering teams were needed for the earlier machine-learning and cloud eras to help companies with deployments.

Taimur Rashid, managing director of the AWS Generative AI Innovation Center,

AWS

Rashid recently talked about how AWS sees FDEs as a profession in a conversation with Computerworld. And he weighed in on the desired job skills the company seeks in this increasingly AI-centric era.

What is an FDE? “We view it as a team. It’s a cross-functional team that has engineers, scientists, strategists, and folks that can piece technology and business together. In some cases, we do have to have security engineers in there, too. 

“I see them as anesthesiologists. They have to prep so many things, monitor things throughout. We see ourselves as a frontier deployment team helping customers adopt all forms of AI, whether it’s genAI, agentic AI, even emerging trends like physical AI. We’re helping these companies become frontier themselves.”

How does an FDE engagement begin, and how is it structured? “Where we see the forward deployed model is when customers come in — for example, we have our executive briefing center in Seattle and in Arlington, VA. When customers share what they’re trying to do, very quickly a customer’s like, “What’s the quickest way I can go and build something with you?” 

“We’ll forward deploy our people in, we’ll embed them in your business and we’ll go through these 45-day sprints that we typically design. Through those successive sprints, we’re building stuff together, we’re proving value, and then they can expand that to a much broader engagement.

Where do FDEs actually sit? Client side, internally, or in-between? “It’s mixed, and it largely depends on what the customer’s preference is. We’ve seen models where the customer has been very adamant that, ‘We want your teams with us in our business.’  In those cases, we forward deploy the majority of the teams on site. 

“We have models where customers are fine with you being wherever you’re based, as long as you’re still embedded virtually. And then there’s a hybrid. We deploy anywhere from five to seven people. Sometimes, the baseline is actually three.”

Will cost savings be the job of an FDE, or someone else on the team? “I expect these teams to be able to architect systems that have those cost requirements in mind, whether it’s use a different model for a different use case that doesn’t increase the per-token cost…or think about ways where you can use semantic caching. I personally think you may have a high spend in token consumption, but if you’re generating revenue, as long as the economics work out, then you’re at peace.”

What challenges have you gone through deploying FDEs in the real world? “One of the challenges worth highlighting is when customers get really excited about us forward deploying resources, what they end up realizing is [that] they’re not set up to absorb that right away. They realize they have to go through … process-related things, security access — all those operational things. 

“One very good example is the Commonwealth Bank of Australia. They said: “Prioritization’s a big thing, and if you forward deploy and you’re 100% dedicated, how do we ensure that our teams are also equally 100% dedicated?’ When you’re sitting in your office, you’re distracted by your day-to-day. So they said, ‘Why don’t we create a neutral ground in Seattle? You fly your people, we’ll fly our people. We’ll give them three weeks of dedicated time so they have no distractions.’”

Have you gone into projects where they want AI but have no security or governance ready? “I’ve been through this before, certainly. We do see customers that have security processes and capabilities, but it’s not as tight as it should be in the age of AI. Governance is the biggest area where customers right now have the biggest gap. I’m talking governance around agents. In the past two months, almost 100% of the conversation around agents is not about capability. It’s all about governance. 

“That is a big area right now where forward deploy teams are helping with governance education, and building the scaffolding for that.”

How does software engineering fit into the FDE model? “One of the greatest learnings is that as we forward deploy resources and get customers to take AI and integrate it into their systems, the knowledge of software engineering is so important. Today, a customer can use one of the Claude models and scan their code base and look at vulnerabilities. 

“The tough part is not assessing those vulnerabilities, it’s remediating [them]. Remediating [them] requires software engineering experience, because you have got to merge code, test it, deploy it. We largely see that the frontier software development teams are smaller and they’re managing agents that are doing various tasks across the software development lifecycle.”

AWS has many models at your scale, open source, closed — it’s more complex than what other AI vendors offer.  How do you nail down the talent? “It’s massive, and when you look at not only scale, it’s the complexity of the stack. We take an approach where we fundamentally do three important things: No. 1, we want to ensure people understand concepts; they have to understand pre-training, post-training, reinforcement, fine-tuning. 

“Secondly, we make sure that our teams are well versed in their first-party services. The third thing is that by design, AWS has always been about choice. We say, ‘Let’s do 80-20 here. What is 20% of those specialties that we need to have, which can cover 80% of what most customers are trying to do?’”

What skills should software developers learn to move into FDE work — the top three or four things? “We look at three categories. First category is entirely functional. Are they more engineering specific? Are they science specific? Are they security specific? Our litmus test is not only knowledge of the function, but the actual hands-on work that they can do with it. Secondly is around domain. I focus on what is their domain understanding across the whole AI lifecycle? The third thing is cultural. We are looking for folks that are okay at dealing with ambiguity, being good at stakeholder management, and having that startup mindset. 

“This AI transformation’s not for the faint of heart.”

There’s a rush for FDEs from OpenAI, Google, and others. What’s different about what you look for? “I don’t know entirely what the others are looking for, but I’ll tell you what we have been looking for in the past. When we hired solution architects, it was about systems level understanding. But what I see more and more is hands-on experience, cultural mindset, all these things are very important. If I had to pick one thing that is going to be very important in the talent that we either upskill or future talent that we hire, it has to be the application of AI towards software engineering and system integration tasks.

You’re upskilling AWS talent as well? “We do. You will see some publications coming out in the next couple of weeks around how do we do this across our software teams and how does that translate to customer-facing roles.”

Kategorie: Hacking & Security

iRhythm discloses data breach, says hackers stole patient info

Bleeping Computer - 10 hodin 34 min zpět
Digital healthcare company iRhythm Holdings has disclosed a data breach after hackers stole patients' personal and health information stored on third-party-hosted business applications. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security
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