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Free Apps Are Quietly Turning Smart TVs Into Web-Scraping Proxies for AIThe Hacker News · 1h agoAI Agent Uncovers 21 Zero-Days in FFmpeg; Chrome Patches Record 429 BugsThe Hacker News · 2h agoMiasma Worm Hits 73 Microsoft GitHub Repositories in Major Supply Chain AttackThe Hacker News · 3h agoCisco Catalyst SD-WAN Manager CVE-2026-20245 Flaw Actively Exploited – No Patch AvailableThe Hacker News · 5h agoSuspicious Polyfill login prompts pop up on Toshiba, Muji websitesBleepingComputer · 12h agoFormer cyber executive turned whistleblower accuses IBM of covering up several data breachesTechCrunch Security · 13h agoCISA: Hackers now exploit SolarWinds Serv-U flaw to crash serversBleepingComputer · 15h agoMiasma Malware Hits 32 Red Hat Packages via Compromised GitHub AccountHackRead · 15h agoChinese APT deploys new malware to keep access to hacked networksBleepingComputer · 16h agoIronWorm and New Miasma Worm Variant Hit npm in Supply Chain AttacksThe Hacker News · 16h agoDark web Nemesis Market vendor gets 26 years for selling drugsBleepingComputer · 16h agoAtlas Menu Data Breach Exposes 64,000 GTA V and CS2 Cheat Service UsersHackRead · 17h agoWeekly Metasploit Update: Apache ActiveMQ RCE, Gogs Rebase RCE, and Windows Kernel Pointer EnumRapid7 · 17h agoSecuring CI/CD in an agentic world: Claude Code Github action caseMicrosoft Security · 17h agoGoogle and FBI warn of ransomware group that sends fake IT workers to hack victims in personTechCrunch Security · 18h agoFree Apps Are Quietly Turning Smart TVs Into Web-Scraping Proxies for AIThe Hacker News · 1h agoAI Agent Uncovers 21 Zero-Days in FFmpeg; Chrome Patches Record 429 BugsThe Hacker News · 2h agoMiasma Worm Hits 73 Microsoft GitHub Repositories in Major Supply Chain AttackThe Hacker News · 3h agoCisco Catalyst SD-WAN Manager CVE-2026-20245 Flaw Actively Exploited – No Patch AvailableThe Hacker News · 5h agoSuspicious Polyfill login prompts pop up on Toshiba, Muji websitesBleepingComputer · 12h agoFormer cyber executive turned whistleblower accuses IBM of covering up several data breachesTechCrunch Security · 13h agoCISA: Hackers now exploit SolarWinds Serv-U flaw to crash serversBleepingComputer · 15h agoMiasma Malware Hits 32 Red Hat Packages via Compromised GitHub AccountHackRead · 15h agoChinese APT deploys new malware to keep access to hacked networksBleepingComputer · 16h agoIronWorm and New Miasma Worm Variant Hit npm in Supply Chain AttacksThe Hacker News · 16h agoDark web Nemesis Market vendor gets 26 years for selling drugsBleepingComputer · 16h agoAtlas Menu Data Breach Exposes 64,000 GTA V and CS2 Cheat Service UsersHackRead · 17h agoWeekly Metasploit Update: Apache ActiveMQ RCE, Gogs Rebase RCE, and Windows Kernel Pointer EnumRapid7 · 17h agoSecuring CI/CD in an agentic world: Claude Code Github action caseMicrosoft Security · 17h agoGoogle and FBI warn of ransomware group that sends fake IT workers to hack victims in personTechCrunch Security · 18h ago

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448 results in Breach

🔴 BreachSchneier on Security·65d ago
Is “Hackback” Official US Cybersecurity Strategy?

The 2026 US “ Cyber Strategy for America ” document is mostly the same thing we’ve seen out of the White House for over a decade, but with a more aggressive tone. But one sentence stood out: “We will unleash the private sector by creating incentives to identify and disrupt adversary networks and scale our national capabilities.” This sounds like a call for hackback: giving private companies permission to conduct offensive cyber operations. The Economist noticed (alternate link ) this, too. I think this is an incredibly dumb idea : In warfare, the notion of counterattack is extremely powerful. Going after the enemy­—its positions, its supply lines, its factories, its infrastructure—­is an age-old military tactic. But in peacetime, we call it revenge, and consider it dangerous. Anyone accused of a crime deserves a fair trial. The accused has the right to defend himself, to face his accuser, to an attorney, and to be presumed innocent until proven guilty. Both vigilante counterattacks, and preemptive attacks, fly in the face of these rights. They punish people before who haven’t been found guilty. It’s the same whether it’s an angry lynch mob stringing up a suspect, the MPAA disabling the computer of someone it believes made an illegal copy of a movie, or a corporate security officer launching a denial-of-service attack against someone he believes is targeting his company over the net. In all of these cases, the attacker could be wrong. This has been true for lynch mobs, and on the internet it’s even harder to know who’s attacking you. Just because my computer looks like the source of an attack doesn’t mean that it is. And even if it is, it might be a zombie controlled by yet another computer; I might be a victim, too. The goal of a government’s legal system is justice; the goal of a vigilante is expediency. We don’t issue letters of marque on the high seas anymore; we shouldn’t do it in cyberspace.

🔴 BreachThe Hacker News·67d ago
Axios Supply Chain Attack Pushes Cross-Platform RAT via Compromised npm Account

The popular HTTP client known as Axios has suffered a supply chain attack after two newly published versions of the npm package introduced a malicious dependency. Versions 1.14.1 and 0.30.4 of Axios have been found to inject "plain-crypto-js" version 4.2.1 as a fake dependency. According to StepSecurity, the two versions were published using the compromised npm credentials of the primary Axios