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U.S. Orders Anthropic to Suspend Fable 5 and Mythos 5 Access for Foreign NationalsThe Hacker News · 5h agoWeekly Metasploit Update: New Kerberos/Certificate tracing options, and multiple new modulesRapid7 · 10h agoFriday Squid Blogging: Squid-Inspired Fluid PumpSchneier on Security · 13h agoChinese cybercrime operation that used AI to scam ‘hundreds of thousands of victims’ sued by GoogleTechCrunch Security · 14h ago400+ Arch Linux AUR Packages Hijacked to Install Rust Credential StealerThe Hacker News · 15h agoGoogle Sues Chinese Smishing Network Accused of Using Gemini AI in PhishingThe Hacker News · 15h agophpBB forum fixes auth bypass bug lurking for a decadeBleepingComputer · 16h agoChina-Linked Hackers Backdoored Linux Login Software to Hide for Nearly a DecadeThe Hacker News · 16h agoAtomic Arch Campaign Hijacks 20+ Linux AUR Packages to Deliver MalwareHackRead · 16h agoUkrainian national pleads guilty to role in Conti ransomware operationBleepingComputer · 16h agoGoogle sues alleged Chinese cybercrime operation that used AI to send scam textsTechCrunch Security · 17h agoOver 400 Arch Linux packages compromised to push rootkit, infostealerBleepingComputer · 17h agoEarly Warning Signs of Supply-Chain Attacks Live in the Dark WebBleepingComputer · 20h agoRansomware Payment Crypto Laundering Platform Taken Out by FBI and EuropolInfosecurity Magazine · 20h agoThe SpaceX Pre-IPO Market: How Crypto Rails Are Opening Synthetic AccessHackRead · 21h agoU.S. Orders Anthropic to Suspend Fable 5 and Mythos 5 Access for Foreign NationalsThe Hacker News · 5h agoWeekly Metasploit Update: New Kerberos/Certificate tracing options, and multiple new modulesRapid7 · 10h agoFriday Squid Blogging: Squid-Inspired Fluid PumpSchneier on Security · 13h agoChinese cybercrime operation that used AI to scam ‘hundreds of thousands of victims’ sued by GoogleTechCrunch Security · 14h ago400+ Arch Linux AUR Packages Hijacked to Install Rust Credential StealerThe Hacker News · 15h agoGoogle Sues Chinese Smishing Network Accused of Using Gemini AI in PhishingThe Hacker News · 15h agophpBB forum fixes auth bypass bug lurking for a decadeBleepingComputer · 16h agoChina-Linked Hackers Backdoored Linux Login Software to Hide for Nearly a DecadeThe Hacker News · 16h agoAtomic Arch Campaign Hijacks 20+ Linux AUR Packages to Deliver MalwareHackRead · 16h agoUkrainian national pleads guilty to role in Conti ransomware operationBleepingComputer · 16h agoGoogle sues alleged Chinese cybercrime operation that used AI to send scam textsTechCrunch Security · 17h agoOver 400 Arch Linux packages compromised to push rootkit, infostealerBleepingComputer · 17h agoEarly Warning Signs of Supply-Chain Attacks Live in the Dark WebBleepingComputer · 20h agoRansomware Payment Crypto Laundering Platform Taken Out by FBI and EuropolInfosecurity Magazine · 20h agoThe SpaceX Pre-IPO Market: How Crypto Rails Are Opening Synthetic AccessHackRead · 21h ago

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Real-time news from 13+ trusted sources — BleepingComputer, The Hacker News, Krebs on Security, Dark Reading & more.

VulnerabilityArs Technica·252d ago
Google confirms Android dev verification will have free and paid tiers, no public list of devs

As we careen toward a future in which Google has final say over what apps you can run , the company has sought to assuage the community's fears with a blog post and a casual "backstage" video. Google has said again and again since announcing the change that sideloading isn't going anywhere, but it's definitely not going to be as easy. The new information confirms app installs will be more reliant on the cloud, and devs can expect new fees, but there will be an escape hatch for hobbyists. Confirming app verification status will be the job of a new system component called the Android Developer Verifier, which will be rolled out to devices in the next major release of Android 16. Google explains that phones must ensure each app has a package name and signing keys that have been registered with Google at the time of installation. This process may break the popular FOSS storefront F-Droid . It would be impossible for your phone to carry a database of all verified apps, so this process may require Internet access. Google plans to have a local cache of the most common sideloaded apps on devices, but for anything else, an Internet connection is required. Google suggests alternative app stores will be able to use a pre-auth token to bypass network calls, but it's still deciding how that will work. Read full article Comments

VulnerabilityArs Technica·277d ago
Former WhatsApp security boss in lawsuit likens Meta’s culture to a “cult”

Over the past year, Meta has blanketed TV screens around the world with commercials touting the privacy of Whatsapp, its encrypted messenger with a monthly user base of 3 billion people. “It’s private,” one ad campaign featuring the former cast of the Modern Family TV show says. “On Whatsapp, no one can see or hear your personal messages … not even us,” a different series of ads declares. “Serious risks to user data” On Monday, the former head of security for the Meta-owed messaging app filed a federal whistleblower lawsuit that tells a far different narrative. The suit, filed in US District Court for the District of Northern California, recites a litany of purported security and privacy flaws that Meta not only didn’t fix after becoming aware of them, but also kept secret, allegedly in violation of a $5 billion settlement then-Whatsapp parent company Facebook reached with the Federal Trade Commission. The complaint was filed by Attaullah Baig, who became head of WhatsApp security in 2021. Read full article Comments

🔴 BreachArs Technica·283d ago
Google says Gmail security is “strong and effective” as it denies major breach

The sky is falling, and Gmail has supposedly been hacked to bits by malicious parties unknown. Or has it? Reports circulated last week claiming that Gmail was the subject of a major data breach, citing a series of warnings Google has distributed and increasing reports of phishing attacks. The hysteria was short-lived, though. In a brief post on its official blog, Google says that Gmail's security is "strong and effective," and reports to the contrary are mistaken. This story seems to have developed due to a random confluence of security events. Google experienced a Gmail data breach in June, but the attack was limited to the company's corporate Salesforce server. The hacker was able to access publicly available information like business names and contact details, but no private information was compromised. Over the following weeks, Google alerted Gmail users to an increase in phishing attacks in July and August. It didn't offer many details, but many believed the spike in phishing was related to the corporate server breach. Indeed, more people are talking about hacking attempts on social media right now. This led to the claim that Gmail's entire user base of 2.5 billion people was about to be hacked at any moment, with some reports advising everyone to change their passwords and enable two-factor authentication. While that's generally good security advice, Google says the truth is much less dramatic. Read full article Comments

🔴 BreachArs Technica·324d ago
After $380M hack, Clorox sues its “service desk” vendor for simply giving out passwords

Hacking is hard. Well, sometimes. Other times, you just call up a company's IT service desk and pretend to be an employee who needs a password reset, an Okta multifactor authentication reset, and a Microsoft multifactor authentication reset... and it's done. Without even verifying your identity. So you use that information to log in to the target network and discover a more trusted user who works in IT security. You call the IT service desk back, acting like you are now this second person, and you request the same thing: a password reset, an Okta multifactor authentication reset, and a Microsoft multifactor authentication reset. Again, the desk provides it, no identity verification needed. Read full article Comments

VulnerabilityArs Technica·338d ago
Browser extensions turn nearly 1 million browsers into website-scraping bots

Extensions installed on almost 1 million devices have been overriding key security protections to turn browsers into engines that scrape websites on behalf of a paid service, a researcher said. The 245 extensions, available for Chrome, Firefox, and Edge, have racked up nearly 909,000 downloads, John Tuckner of SecurityAnnex reported . The extensions serve a wide range of purposes, including managing bookmarks and clipboards, boosting speaker volumes, and generating random numbers. The common thread among all of them: They incorporate MellowTel-js , an open source JavaScript library that allows developers to monetize their extensions. Intentional weakening of browsing protections Tuckner and critics say the monetization works by using the browser extensions to scrape websites on behalf of paying customers, which include AI startups, according to MellowTel founder Arsian Ali. Tuckner reached this conclusion after uncovering close ties between MellowTel and Olostep , a company that bills itself as "the world's most reliable and cost-effective Web scraping API." Olostep says its service “avoids all bot detection and can parallelize up to 100K requests in minutes.” Paying customers submit the locations of browsers they want to access specific webpages. Olostep then uses its installed base of extension users to fulfill the request. Read full article Comments

VulnerabilityFortinet PSIRT·459d ago
Pre-authentication Denial of Service attack in OpenSSH - CVE-2025-26466

CVSSv3 Score: 5.9 CVE-2025-26466A flaw was found in the OpenSSH package. For each ping packet the SSH server receives, a pong packet is allocated in a memory buffer and stored in a queue of packages. It is only freed when the server/client key exchange has finished. A malicious client may keep sending such packages, leading to an uncontrolled increase in memory consumption on the server side. Consequently, the server may become unavailable, resulting in a denial of service attack. Revised on 2026-05-25 00:00:00