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1479 articles · page 66 of 74

Report: Many Indian Suppliers Pose Global Supply Risks

🔍 SecurityScorecard's assessment found that 53% of selected Indian vendors experienced at least one third-party breach in the past year, with outsourced IT operations and managed service providers representing 63% of those incidents. The study evaluated 15 prominent Indian suppliers across 10 industries using security ratings based on patching cadence, DNS health, IP reputation, and endpoint, network and app security, and concluded that 27% of vendors received an F while 25% earned an A. It recommends continuous monitoring of third- and fourth-party ecosystems, prioritizing certificate management and patching, and using cybersecurity ratings to inform procurement and ongoing vendor oversight.
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DeceptiveDevelopment: Social-Engineered Crypto Theft

🧩DeceptiveDevelopment is a North Korea-aligned actor active since 2023 that leverages advanced social-engineering to compromise software developers across Windows, Linux and macOS. Operators pose as recruiters on platforms like LinkedIn and deliver trojanized codebases and staged interviews using a ClickFix workflow to trick victims into executing malware. Their multiplaform toolset ranges from obfuscated Python and JavaScript loaders to Go and .NET backdoors that exfiltrate crypto, credentials and sensitive data. ESET's white paper and IoC repository provide full technical analysis and telemetry.
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Bookworm Linked to Stately Taurus — Unit 42 Analysis

🔎 This Unit 42 case study applies the Unit 42 Attribution Framework to link the Bookworm remote access Trojan to the Chinese APT group Stately Taurus by combining malware analysis, tooling, OPSEC, infrastructure, victimology, and timelines. Analysts highlighted embedded PDB paths, a UUID-based shellcode encoding technique, and co-occurrence with a custom tool named ToneShell. Overlapping C2 IPs and domains, consistent targeting in Southeast Asia, and closely aligned compile times supported a high-confidence attribution. Palo Alto Networks also lists protections across WildFire, NGFW, URL/DNS filtering, Cortex XDR, and incident response contact options.
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Ransomware Speed Crisis: Defending at Machine Pace

⚠️ Ransomware attacks have accelerated to machine speed, often completing exfiltration and impact in minutes rather than days. Unit 42 research documents a dramatic decline in mean time to exfiltrate, driven by AI automation, initial access brokers and RaaS, which together enable highly targeted, fast-moving campaigns. Organizations now need AI-powered detection, automated containment and unified XDR visibility across endpoints, network and cloud to stop threats in real time. Human analysts remain vital but must operate alongside automated systems to focus on hunting and strategic response.
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YiBackdoor Linked to IcedID and Latrodectus Code Overlaps

🔒 Zscaler ThreatLabz disclosed a new malware family named YiBackdoor that shares notable source-code overlaps with IcedID and Latrodectus. First observed in June 2025 with limited deployments, YiBackdoor can execute arbitrary commands, collect system information, capture screenshots, and load encrypted plugins to expand capabilities. It uses anti-analysis checks, injects into svchost.exe, persists via a Run registry entry that invokes regsvr32.exe with a randomized name, and fetches commands from an embedded encrypted configuration over HTTP. Zscaler warns it could be leveraged to gain initial access for follow-on exploitation, including ransomware.
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Extending Zero Trust to the Storage Layer: Resilience

🔒 Applying zero trust to the storage layer is no longer theoretical — it is now essential to ensure recovery. The author describes ransomware incidents, including Change Healthcare in February 2024, where attackers deliberately targeted backups and recovery points, exposing storage as a primary attack surface. He recommends three operational principles — control where data is touched, control who and when, and make critical backups immutable — and ties those measures to governance, policy-as-code, and executive outcomes.
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Iframe Security Exposed — Payment Checkout Blind Spot

🔒Payment iframes are no longer a guaranteed sandbox: attackers have adopted pixel-perfect overlays and other injection techniques to steal card data from checkout pages. The article dissects the August 2024 Stripe skimmer campaign that compromised dozens of merchants and used a deprecated API to validate stolen cards in real time. It explains why legacy controls like X-Frame-Options and basic CSP fail when the host page is compromised and outlines a practical six-step defense combining strict CSP, real-time DOM monitoring, secure postMessage handling, and tooling changes required by PCI DSS 4.0.1.
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Allianz: Attackers Shift From Large Firms to Easier Targets

🛡️ Allianz warns that cybercriminals are increasingly shifting focus from well‑defended large organizations to smaller, less secure firms and to regions beyond the US and Europe. The insurer's Cyber report says customer losses in H1 2025 were about half those in H1 2024, even as active ransomware groups may have risen by roughly 50%. Double extortion and data theft now account for a growing share of large losses, and attackers often exploit third‑party IT providers to reach hardened targets.
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Application Security Posture Management: Buying Guide

🛡️ Application Security Posture Management (ASPM) consolidates visibility and controls across cloud, container, and on-premises application environments to help organizations manage the growing volume of vulnerabilities. ASPM platforms typically secure the software development lifecycle and supply chain, automate testing, and integrate with existing tools to enable prioritization and remediation. Feature sets vary widely, and vendors take either a code-first or cloud-first approach, so buyers should evaluate integrations, scan capabilities, coverage, analysis teams, and pricing before purchasing.
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QR Codes Used to Hide JavaScript Backdoor in npm Package

🔒 A malicious npm package called fezbox was discovered using layered obfuscation and QR-code steganography to conceal credential-stealing logic. Disguised as a benign JavaScript/TypeScript utility, importing the library triggered retrieval and execution of code hidden inside a remote QR image; the payload reads document.cookie and attempts to extract username and password pairs for exfiltration. Socket researchers highlighted a development-environment guard and a 120-second delay as anti-analysis measures; the package has been removed from GitHub and marked malicious.
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RainyDay, Turian and PlugX Variant Abuse DLL Hijacking

🛡️ Cisco Talos describes an ongoing campaign in which Naikon-linked actors abused DLL search order hijacking to load multiple backdoors, including RainyDay, a customized PlugX variant and Turian. The report highlights shared loaders that use XOR and RC4 decryption with identical keys and an XOR-RC4-RtlDecompressBuffer unpacking chain. Talos notes the PlugX variant adopts a RainyDay-style configuration and includes embedded keylogging and persistence, with activity observed since 2022 targeting telecom and manufacturing organizations in Central and South Asia. Talos published IOCs and recommended mitigations for detection and prevention.
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Data Loss Rises Despite Increased Security Spending

🔒 The 2025 Data Security Report from Fortinet and Cybersecurity Insiders finds that data loss is increasing even as organizations shift to programmatic approaches and boost budgets for insider risk and data protection. Legacy DLP tools, designed for perimeter-era environments, lack visibility into employee interactions across SaaS, cloud, and generative AI, and they fail to provide the context needed to separate accidents from real threats. The report urges adoption of behavior-aware, unified platforms—such as FortiDLP integrated with identity and activity telemetry—to turn alerts into actionable risk narratives and reduce costly insider incidents.
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2025 DORA Report: AI-assisted Software Development

🤖 The 2025 DORA Report synthesizes survey responses from nearly 5,000 technology professionals and over 100 hours of qualitative data to examine how AI is reshaping software development. It finds AI amplifies existing team strengths and weaknesses: strong teams accelerate productivity and product performance, while weaker teams see magnified problems and increased instability. The report highlights near-universal AI adoption (90%), widespread productivity gains (>80%), a continuing trust gap in AI-generated code (~30% distrust), and recommends investment in platform engineering, user-centric workflows, and the DORA AI Capabilities Model to unlock AI’s value.
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AI Growth Fuels Surge in Hardware and API Vulnerabilities

🛡️ Bugcrowd's annual "Inside the Mind of a CISO 2025: Resilience in an AI-Accelerated World" report warns that rapid, AI-assisted development is expanding the attack surface and exposing foundational weaknesses. Published September 23, the study links faster release cycles to gaps in access control, data protection and hardware security, and highlights rising API and network vulnerabilities. It calls for continuous offensive testing and collective intelligence to mitigate escalating risks.
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Lean Security Teams Elevate Risk from Hardcoded Secrets

🔒 As organizations shrink and security teams tighten, hardcoded secrets have become a critical, costly blind spot that manual processes can no longer manage. The article cites rising credential-driven breaches, a 292‑day average containment window, and steep financial impacts when secrets are exposed. It contends that precision remediation — contextual ownership, integrated workflows, and automated rotation — is essential to reduce remediation from weeks to hours and to curb analyst overhead. GitGuardian is presented as an example of this targeted remediation approach.
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Attacker Breakout Time Drops to 18 Minutes, ReliaQuest

🔒 ReliaQuest's Threat Spotlight (June–August 2025) reports average attacker breakout time — the period from initial access to lateral movement — has fallen to 18 minutes, with one Akira incident taking just six minutes. The vendor warns adversaries are becoming faster and more adept at bypassing endpoint protections, noting an increase in ransomware using the SMB protocol (from 20% to 29%). Drive-by compromise was the leading initial vector at 34%, and USB-based malware, notably Gamarue, is resurging due to weak policy enforcement and inconsistent endpoint controls.
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Essential Security Tools Every Organization Should Deploy

🔐 Security leaders face a shifting threat landscape, tighter regulation, and increasing IT complexity, so a well-integrated toolset is essential. The article outlines 13 core solution categories — from XDR, MFA and IAM to DLP, CASB, backup/DR and AI‑SPM — and explains how each strengthens detection, access control, data protection and recovery. Emphasis is placed on integration, automation and real-time response to reduce manual verification and satisfy compliance and cyberinsurance requirements.
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Operation Rewrite: BadIIS SEO Poisoning Campaign in Asia

🔍 Unit 42 uncovered Operation Rewrite, a March 2025 SEO poisoning campaign that deploys a native IIS implant called BadIIS to manipulate search engine indexing and redirect users to attacker-controlled scam sites. The implant registers request handlers, inspects User‑Agent and Referer headers, and proxies malicious content from remote C2 servers. Variants include lightweight ASP.NET page handlers, a managed .NET IIS module, and an all-in-one PHP front controller. Organizations can detect and block activity with Palo Alto Networks protections and should engage incident responders if compromised.
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DORA AI Capabilities Model: Seven Levers of Success

🔍 The DORA research team introduces the inaugural DORA AI Capabilities Model, identifying seven technical and cultural capabilities that amplify the benefits of AI-assisted software development. Based on interviews, literature review, and a near-5,000‑respondent survey, the model highlights priorities such as clear AI policies, healthy and AI-accessible internal data, strong version control, small-batch work, user-centricity, and quality internal platforms. The guidance focuses on practices that move organizations beyond tool adoption to measurable performance improvements.
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Why Phishing Is Moving Beyond Email Delivery: Risks

🔗 Phishing attacks are increasingly delivered outside traditional email — via social media, instant messaging, SMS, malvertising and in‑app messengers — making mail gateways insufficient. Attackers now send links from compromised accounts, targeted ads or SaaS messages and use fast‑rotating domains and advanced Attacker‑in‑the‑Middle (AitM) kits that obfuscate JavaScript and the DOM to evade network detection. Organizations often rely on user reports and URL blocking, but these approaches fail against rapid domain churn and client‑side stealth. Vendors such as Push Security propose browser‑level detection that monitors real‑time page behavior to identify AitM, session hijacking and credential theft.
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