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Before yesterdayWIRED

AI-Generated Voice Deepfakes Aren’t Scary Good—Yet

By Lily Hay Newman
The threat of scammers using voice deepfakes in their cons is real, but researchers say old-school voice-impersonation attacks are still the more pressing concern.

The World’s Real ‘Cybercrime’ Problem

By Andrew Couts, Dhruv Mehrotra
From US state laws to the international stage, definitions of “cybercrime” remain vague, broad, and increasingly entrenched in our legal systems.

A Spy Wants to Connect With You on LinkedIn

By Jennifer Conrad, Matt Burgess
Russia, North Korea, Iran, and China have been caught using fake profiles to gather information. But the platform’s tools to weed them out only go so far.

Ransomware Attacks Have Entered a ‘Heinous’ New Phase

By Lily Hay Newman
With victims refusing to pay, cybercriminal gangs are now releasing stolen photos of cancer patients and sensitive student records.

How a Catholic Group Doxed Gay Priests

By Lily Hay Newman, Dhruv Mehrotra
Plus: A data breach exposes Washington, Ring camera footage has a new problem, and the George Santos scandal slips into the world of cybercrime.

‘Pig Butchering’ Scams Are Now a $3 Billion Threat

By Lily Hay Newman
The FBI’s latest Internet Crime Report highlights the stunning rise of investment-themed crimes over the past 18 months.

The LastPass Hack Somehow Gets Worse

By Lily Hay Newman
Plus: The US Marshals disclose a “major” cybersecurity incident, T-Mobile has gotten pwned so much, and more.

The High-Stakes Blame Game in the White House Cybersecurity Plan

By Lily Hay Newman
The Biden administration’s new strategy would shift the liability for security failures to a controversial target: the companies that caused them.

This Hacker Tool Can Pinpoint a DJI Drone Operator's Exact Location

By Andy Greenberg
Every DJI quadcopter broadcasts its operator's position via radio—unencrypted. Now, a group of researchers has learned to decode those coordinates.

China Is Relentlessly Hacking Its Neighbors

By Matt Burgess
New details reveal that Beijing-backed hackers targeted the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, adding to a string of attacks in the region.

Security News This Week: Sensitive US Military Emails Exposed

By Dhruv Mehrotra, Andrew Couts
Plus: Iran’s secret torture black sites, hacking a bank account with AI-generated voice, and Lance Bass’ unhinged encounter in Russia.

Ukraine Suffered More Wiper Malware in 2022 Than Anywhere, Ever

By Andy Greenberg
As Russia has accelerated its cyberattacks on its neighbor, it's barraged the country with an unprecedented volume of different data-destroying programs.

A New Kind of Bug Spells Trouble for iOS and macOS Security

By Matt Burgess
Security researchers found a class of flaws that, if exploited, would allow an attacker to access people’s messages, photos, and call history.

Hackers Ran Amok Inside GoDaddy for Nearly 3 Years

By Andy Greenberg, Andrew Couts
Plus: The FBI got (at least a little bit) hacked, an election-disruption firm gets exposed, Russia mulls allowing “patriotic hacking,” and more.

Pig Butchering Scams Are Evolving Fast

By Lily Hay Newman
Investment schemes are ensnaring victims with increasingly compelling narratives and believable tech.

North Korean Hackers Are Attacking US Hospitals

By Matt Burgess, Lily Hay Newman
Plus: Deepfake disinformation spotted in the wild, Android privacy problems in China, Reddit gets phished, and more.

Meet the Creator of North Korea’s Favorite Crypto Privacy Service

By Andy Greenberg
The world’s most prolific crypto thieves have used Sinbad.io to launder tens of millions. Its creator, “Mehdi,” answers WIRED’s questions.

Russia’s Ransomware Gangs Are Being Named and Shamed

By Matt Burgess, Lily Hay Newman
Members of the Trickbot and Conti cybercrime gangs have been sanctioned in an unprecedented wave of action against the country’s hackers.

Googling for Software Downloads Is Extra Risky Right Now

By Lily Hay Newman, Andrew Couts
Plus: The FTC cracks down on GoodRx, Microsoft boots “verified” phishing scammers, researchers disclose EV charger vulnerabilities, and more.

You Really Need to Update Firefox and Android Right Now

By Kate O'Flaherty
January saw a slew of security patches for iOS, Chrome, Windows, and more.

The Untold Story of a Crippling Ransomware Attack

By Matt Burgess
More than two years ago, criminals crippled the systems of London’s Hackney Council. It's still fighting to recover.

A Link to News Site Meduza Can (Technically) Land You in Russian Prison

By Andy Greenberg, Andrew Couts
Plus: Hive ransomware gang gets knocked offline, FBI confirms North Korea stole $100 million, and more.

Most Criminal Cryptocurrency Funnels Through Just 5 Exchanges

By Andy Greenberg
The crypto money-laundering market is tighter than at any time in the past decade, and the few big players are moving a “shocking” amount of currency.

The Unrelenting Menace of the LockBit Ransomware Gang

By Matt Burgess, Lily Hay Newman
The notorious Russian-speaking cybercriminals grew successful by keeping a low profile. But now they have a target on their backs.

Flaw in Diksha App Exposed the Data of Millions of Indian Students

By Vittoria Elliott, Dhruv Mehrotra
A mandatory app exposed the personal information of students and teachers across the country for over a year.

The Biggest US Surveillance Program You Didn’t Know About

By Dhruv Mehrotra, Andrew Couts
Plus: A leaked US “no fly” list, the SCOTUS leaker slips investigators, and PayPal gets stuffed.

T-Mobile's New Data Breach Shows Its $150 Million Security Investment Isn't Cutting It

By Lily Hay Newman
The mobile operator just suffered at least its fifth data breach since 2018, despite promising to spend a fortune shoring up its systems.

Welcome to the Era of Internet Blackouts

By Lily Hay Newman
New research from Cloudflare shows that connectivity disruptions are becoming a problem around the globe, pointing toward a troubling new normal.

A Sneaky Ad Scam Tore Through 11 Million Phones

By Matt Burgess
Some 1,700 spoofed apps, 120 targeted publishers, 12 billion false ad requests per day—Vastflux is one of the biggest ad frauds ever discovered.

Russian Ransomware Gang Attack Destabilizes UK Royal Mail

By Lily Hay Newman
Plus: Joe Biden’s classified-documents scandal, the end of security support for Windows 7, and more.

In the Fight Against Scams, ‘Cyber Ambassadors’ Enter the Chat

By Varsha Bansal
Police in the Indian state of Telangana have found a novel way to help people avoid getting swindled online: grassroots education.

A Siemens S7-1500 Logic Controller Flaw Raises the Specter of Stuxnet

By Lily Hay Newman
More than 120 models of Siemens' S7-1500 PLCs contain a serious vulnerability—and no fix is on the way.

Slack Discloses Breach of Its Github Code Repository

By Matt Burgess
Plus: Russian spies uncovered in Europe, face recognition leads to another wrongful arrest, a new porn ID law, and more.

Twitter Data Leak: What the Exposure of 200 Million User Emails Means for You

By Lily Hay Newman
The exposure of hundreds of millions of email addresses puts pseudonymous users of the social network at risk.

Turla, a Russian Espionage Group, Piggybacked on Other Hackers' USB Infections

By Andy Greenberg
The infamous, FSB-connected Turla group took over other hackers' servers, exploiting their USB drive malware for targeted espionage.

Cops Hacked Thousands of Phones. Was It Legal?

By Matt Burgess
When police infiltrated the EncroChat phone system in 2020, they hit an intelligence gold mine. But subsequent legal challenges have spread across Europe.

What Is a Pig Butchering Scam?

By Lily Hay Newman
This type of devastating scheme ensnares victims and takes them for all they’re worth—and the threat is only growing.

Update Android Right Now to Fix a Scary Remote-Execution Flaw

By Kate O'Flaherty
Plus: Patches for Apple iOS 16, Google Chrome, Windows 10, and more.

The Worst Hacks of 2022

By Lily Hay Newman
The year was marked by sinister new twists on cybersecurity classics, including phishing, breaches, and ransomware attacks.

LastPass Data Breach: It’s Time to Ditch This Password Manager

By Lily Hay Newman
The password manager’s most recent data breach is so concerning, users need to take immediate steps to protect themselves.

Russia’s Cyberwar Foreshadowed Deadly Attacks on Civilians

By Andy Greenberg
The Kremlin’s aggression in Ukraine is following a dangerous playbook that began to unfold years ago.

Hacktivism Is Back and Messier Than Ever

By Matt Burgess
Throughout 2022, geopolitics has given rise to a new wave of politically motivated attacks with an undercurrent of state-sponsored meddling.

The Most Dangerous People on the Internet in 2022

By WIRED Staff
From SBF to the GRU, these were the most disruptive forces of online chaos this year.

Russians Hacked JFK Airport Taxi Dispatch in Line-Skipping Scheme

By WIRED Staff
Plus: An offensive US hacking operation, swatters hacking Ring cameras, a Netflix password-sharing crackdown, and more.

What Is Flipper Zero? The Hacker Tool Going Viral on TikTok, Explained

By Dhruv Mehrotra
Don’t be fooled by its fun name and Tamagotchi-like interface—this do-everything gadget is trouble waiting to happen and a whole lot more.

Iran’s Internet Blackouts Are Sabotaging Its Own Economy

By Lily Hay Newman
A new US State Department assessment highlights the stark economic toll of Tehran’s recent shutdowns and platform control.

An Alleged Russian Smuggling Ring Was Uncovered in New Hampshire

By Lily Hay Newman
Plus: An FBI platform got hacked, an ex-Twitter employee is sentenced for espionage, malicious Windows 10 installers circulate in Ukraine, and more.

Meta’s Tricky Quest to Protect Your Account

By Lily Hay Newman
How do you keep Facebook easy to use without being trivial to exploit? The company is trying to chart a middle ground.

GPS Signals Are Being Disrupted in Russian Cities

By Matt Burgess
Navigation system monitors have seen a recent uptick in interruptions since Ukraine began launching long-range drone attacks.

Cuba Ransomware Gang Abused Microsoft Certificates to Sign Malware

By Lily Hay Newman
The company has taken measures to mitigate the risks, but security researchers warn of a broader threat.

Hackers Planted Files to Frame Indian Priest Who Died in Custody

By Andy Greenberg
And new evidence suggests those hackers may have collaborated with the police who investigated him.

Attackers Keep Targeting the US Electric Grid

By Andy Greenberg
Plus: Chinese hackers stealing US Covid relief funds, a cyberattack on the Met Opera website, and more.

Log4j’s Log4Shell Vulnerability: One Year Later, It’s Still Lurking

By Lily Hay Newman
Despite mitigation, one of the worst bugs in internet history is still prevalent—and being exploited.

Popular HR and Payroll Company Sequoia Discloses a Data Breach

By Lily Hay Newman
The company, which works with hundreds of startups, said it detected unauthorized access to personal data, including Social Security numbers.

Apple Expands End-to-End Encryption to iCloud Backups

By Lily Hay Newman
The company will also soon support the use of physical authentication keys with Apple ID, and is adding contact verification for iMessage in 2023.

Scammers Are Scamming Other Scammers Out of Millions of Dollars

By Matt Burgess
On cybercrime forums, user complaints about being duped may accidentally expose their real identities.

China’s Police State Targets Zero-Covid Protesters

By Dhruv Mehrotra
Plus: ICE accidentally doxes asylum seekers, Google fails to uphold a post-Roe promise, and LastPass suffers the second breach this year.

Android Phone Makers’ Encryption Keys Stolen and Used in Malware

By Lily Hay Newman
Device manufacturers use “platform certificates” to verify an app’s authenticity, making them particularly dangerous in the wrong hands.

Google Moves to Block Invasive Spanish Spyware Framework

By Lily Hay Newman
The Heliconia hacking tool exploited vulnerabilities in Chrome, Windows Defender, and Firefox, according to company security researchers.

The Hunt for the Kingpin Behind AlphaBay, Part 6: Endgame

By Andy Greenberg
With AlphaBay shuttered, Operation Bayonet enters its final phase: driving the site’s refugees into a giant trap. But one refugee hatched his own plan.
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