Alex Mashinsky, the now-former CEO of collapsed cryptocurrency concern Celsius, today faces charges of fraud as prosecutors and watchdogs pile in.β¦
Microsoft is causing a stir among some tech pros after confirming it plans to rename Azure AD to Entra.β¦
Patch Tuesday Microsoft today addressed 130 CVE-listed vulnerabilities in its products β and five of those bugs have already been exploited in the wild.β¦
Staff at one of the UK's largest hospital groups have spent a nervous week wondering if private data, stolen from their employer's IT systems by a ransomware gang, is going to be splurged online after a deadline to prevent publication passed.β¦
Infosec in brief With riots rocking the country, French parliamentarians have passed a bill granting law enforcement the right to snoop on suspects via "the remote activation of an electronic device without the knowledge or consent of its owner."Β β¦
Capita has informed some of its employees that its own pension fund was among the victims of a cybercrime attack on its system, resulting in the theft of their personal details, they say.β¦
Nickelodeon says it is probing claims that "decades old" material was stolen from it and leaked online. This follows reports on social media that someone had dumped 500GB of snatched animation files. Hilarity, and many SpongeBob SquarePants memes, ensued.β¦
Microsoft is having a rough week with troubles including an Outlook.com bug that prevented some email users from searching their messages for several hours on Thursday, and a Teams flaw that allows people to send phishing emails and malware to other Teams users.β¦
The port of Nagoya β which shifted 2.68 million shipping containers and 164 million tons of cargo in 2022 β has moved precious few in the last 24 hours after finding itself the latest victim of Russia's notorious LockBit ransomware gang.β¦
A North Korean satellite allegedly designed for reconnaissance was not viable for its alleged intended purpose, according to South Korea's military on Wednesday.β¦
A now-former Amazon manager described by prosecutors as the "mastermind" behind a nearly $10 million scheme to steal money from the online megaretailer using fake invoices has been sentenced to 16 years behind bars in federal prison.β¦
Boffins at the University of California, Davis have devised a purportedly practical way to apply a memory abuse technique called Rowhammer to build unique, stable device fingerprints.β¦
International cops have arrested a suspected "key figure" of a cybercrime group dubbed OPERA1ER that has stolen as much as $30 million from more than 30 banks and financial orgs across 15 countries.β¦
Singapore has joined the ranks of nations requiring digital payment operators to follow the same sort of regulations and customer protection requirements that apply to conventional financial institutions.β¦
Infosec outfit Checkpoint says it's spotted a Chinese actor targeting diplomatic facilities around Europe.β¦
More than 338,000 FortiGate firewalls are still unpatched and vulnerable to CVE-2023-27997, a critical bug Fortinet fixed last month that's being exploited in the wild.β¦
America's Transportation Security Agency (TSA) intends to expand its facial-recognition program used to screen US air travel passengers to 430 domestic airports in under a decade.β¦
It's an awkward Monday for Dublin Airport after pay and benefits details for some 2,000 staff were apparently "compromised" following a recent attack on professional service provider Aon.β¦
The United States' National Counterintelligence and Security Center (NCSC) has warned that China's updated Counter-Espionage law β which came into effect on July 1 β is dangerously ambiguous and could pose a risk to global business.β¦
Asia In Brief Japan's government last Friday rebuked Fujitsu for shabby cloud security.β¦
Following claims by ransomware gang LockBit that it has stolen data belonging to TSMC, the chip-making giant has said it was in fact one of its equipment suppliers, Kinmax, that was compromised by the crew, and not TSMC itself.β¦
New Jersey cops must apply for a wiretap order β not just a warrant β for near-continual snooping on suspects' Facebook accounts, according to a unanimous ruling by that US state's Supreme Court.Β β¦
Sponsored Post Nobody here at is likely to argue with Albert Einstein's idea that "intellectual growth should commence at birth and cease only at death".β¦
On Call Hard-coded into The Register's week is that each Friday morning youβll find a new instalment of On Call, our reader contributed tales of tech support troubles.β¦
Fujitsu Japan is in the spotlight again for all the wrong reasons, after fumbling its attempt to fix the nation's troubled ID card scheme.β¦
One of the two men who admitted stealing more than $23 million in royalty payments for songs played on YouTube has been sentenced to nearly six years behind bars for his role in what prosecutors called "one of the largest music-royalty frauds ever."β¦
The most dangerous type of software bug is the out-of-bounds write, according to MITRE this week. This type of flaw is responsible for 70 CVE-tagged holes in the US government's list of known vulnerabilities that are under active attack and need to be patched, we note.β¦
It's been months since "spy balloon" fever gripped the United States, but the headline-grabbing flying object βΒ alleged to have been deployed by China β is back in the news. Preliminary findings from the US inspection of its wreckage show a whole bunch of commercially available hardware made in the States.β¦
Apple has joined the rapidly growing chorus of tech organizations calling on British lawmakers to revise the nation's Online Safety Bill β which for now is in the hands of the House of Lords β so that it safeguards strong end-to-end encryption.β¦
A Russian network security specialist and former editor of Hacker magazine who is wanted by the US and Russia on cybercrime charges has been detained in Kazakhstan as the two governments seek his extradition.β¦
It's bad enough there's some Android stalkerware out there with the not-at-all-creepy moniker LetMeSpy. Now someone's got hold of the information the app collects β such as victims' text messages and call logs β as well as the email addresses of those who sought out the software, and leaked it all.β¦
Police breaking into and snooping on the EncroChat encrypted messaging network has led to 6,558 arrests worldwide and nearly β¬740 million seized in criminal funds, according to cops in France and the Netherlands.β¦
The npm Public Registry, a database of JavaScript packages, fails to compare npm package manifest data with the archive of files that data describes, creating an opportunity for the installation and execution of malicious files.β¦
Sponsored Feature The cybersecurity sector, it is now routinely attested, is in the midst of a long-term skills crisis.β¦
Sponsored Post Imagine if you could get instant advice on how to protect your cloud infrastructure against cyber threats from some of the world's best cloud security experts without leaving the comfort of your chair.β¦
A vendor that operates a pilot recruitment platform used by major airlines exposed the personal files of more than 8,000 pilot and cadet applicants at American Airlines and Southwest Airlines.β¦
Infosec in brief In a case startlingly similar to charges recently unsealed against one-term US president Donald Trump, a former FBI analyst has been jailed for taking sensitive classified material home with her.β¦
JP Morgan has been fined $4 million by America's securities watchdog, the SEC, for deleting millions of email records dating from 2018 relating to its Chase Bank subsidiary.β¦
Webinar In the new age of generative AI, it would be foolhardy to imagine that bad actors won't already be exploiting every opportunity to launch an attack with their own malicious AI generated war machines.β¦
Bug hunters who found security holes in Google β and also responsibly disclosed details of those flaws to the Chocolate Factory β earned more than $12 million in bounty rewards in 2022, marking a record year for the corporation's Vulnerability Reward Programs (VRPs) in terms of payouts and number of vulnerabilities found and fixed.β¦
British law practices of "all sizes and types" have been warned by GCHQ's cyberspy arm that their "widespread adoption of hybrid working" combined with the large sums of money they handle is making them a target.β¦
Webinar The explosion in remote working since the pandemic means the number of people doing their job from home has more than doubled in the UK.β¦
Malware intended to spread on USB drives is unintentionally infecting networked storage devices, according to infosec vendor Checkpoint.β¦
China has a playbook to use IP theft to seize leadership in cloud computing, and other nations should band together to stop that happening, according to Nathaniel C. Fick, the US ambassador-at-large for cyberspace and digital policy.β¦
BlackLotus, the malware capable of bypassing Secure Boot protections and compromising Windows computers, has caught the ire of the NSA, which today published a guide to help organizations detect and prevent infections of the UEFI bootkit.β¦
Ransomware gang BlackCat claims it infected a plastic surgery center, stole "lots" of highly sensitive medical records, and has vowed to leak patients' photos if the clinic doesn't pay up.β¦
Sponsored Feature Friday the 10 of December 2021 is etched in the memory of many IT professionals, but not for reasons they will look back on with fondness. That was the day, just as most American workers were logging off for a long weekend, when a critical vulnerability in an obscure but essential piece of software code first came to widespread attention.β¦
Japanese prime minister Fumio Kishida has ordered an emergency review of the nation's ID Cards, amid revelations of glitches and data leaks that threaten the government's digital services push.β¦
Webinar The one thing a cyber security team can rarely afford to do is relax its vigilance. But count the collective manhours spent on the frontline and the figure starts to look unsustainable, leaving many organizations with little choice but to engage with technology to help defend against malign intent.β¦
Miscreants are right now exploiting two security bugs for which patches exist, one in a VMware network and applications monitoring tool and the other in some TP-Link routers.β¦
Whoever is infecting people's iPhones with the TriangleDB spyware may be targeting macOS computers with similar malware, according to Kaspersky researchers.β¦
The Federal Trade Commission has alleged that genetic testing firm 1Health.io, also known as Vitagene, deceived people when it said it would dispose of their physical DNA sample as well as their collected health data.β¦
Sponsored Post Cybercrime is a global phenomenon, but the effectiveness of measures put in place to fight it varies considerably from one region to another.β¦
Mondelez International has warned 51,000 of its past and present employees that their personal information has been stolen from a law firm hired by the Oreo and Ritz cracker giant.β¦
Reddit this week confirmed ransomware gang BlackCat, aka AlphaV, broke into its corporate systems in February.β¦
UPDATED Singapore-based threat intelligence outfit Group-IB has found ChatGPT credentials in more than 100,000 stealer logs traded on the dark web in the past year.β¦
An infosec incident at a major Australian law firm has sparked fear among the nation's governments, banks and businesses β and a free speech debate.β¦
Infosec in brief Remember earlier this year, when we found out that a bunch of baddies including at least one nation-state group broke into a US federal government agency's Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS) web server by exploiting a critical three-year-old Telerik bug to achieve remote code execution?β¦
Sponsored Feature Life is tougher than ever for security pros facing a rising tide of cyberattacks. And adversaries are becoming more adept than ever at using diverse methods and technologies to scale up assaults on their selected targets.β¦
In the murky world of political and corporate spin, announcing bad news on Friday afternoon β a time when few media outlets are watching, and audiences are at a low ebb β is called "taking out the trash." And thatβs what Microsoft appears to have done last Friday.β¦