FreshRSS

πŸ”’
❌ About FreshRSS
There are new available articles, click to refresh the page.
Today β€” April 27th 2024Your RSS feeds
Yesterday β€” April 26th 2024Your RSS feeds
Before yesterdayYour RSS feeds

'ArcaneDoor' Cyberspies Hacked Cisco Firewalls to Access Government Networks

By Andy Greenberg
Sources suspect China is behind the targeted exploitation of two zero-day vulnerabilities in Cisco’s security appliances.

5 Best VPN Services (2024): For Routers, PC, iPhone, Android, and More

By Scott Gilbertson
It won’t solve all of your privacy problems, but a virtual private network can make you a less tempting target for hackers.

ShotSpotter Keeps Listening for Gunfire After Contracts Expire

By Max Blaisdell, Jim Daley
Internal emails suggest that the company continued to provide gunshot data to police in cities where its contracts had been canceled.

Change Healthcare Finally Admits It Paid Ransomware Hackersβ€”and Still Faces a Patient Data Leak

By Andy Greenberg
The company belatedly conceded both that it had paid the cybercriminals extorting it and that patient data nonetheless ended up on the dark web.

Russian FSB Counterintelligence Chief Gets 9 Years in Cybercrime Bribery Scheme

By BrianKrebs

The head of counterintelligence for a division of the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) was sentenced last week to nine years in a penal colony for accepting a USD $1.7 million bribe to ignore the activities of a prolific Russian cybercrime group that hacked thousands of e-commerce websites. The protection scheme was exposed in 2022 when Russian authorities arrested six members of the group, which sold millions of stolen payment cards at flashy online shops like Trump’s Dumps.

A now-defunct carding shop that sold stolen credit cards and invoked 45’s likeness and name.

As reported by The Record, a Russian court last week sentenced former FSB officer Grigory Tsaregorodtsev for taking a $1.7 million bribe from a cybercriminal group that was seeking a β€œroof,” a well-placed, corrupt law enforcement official who could be counted on to both disregard their illegal hacking activities and run interference with authorities in the event of their arrest.

Tsaregorodtsev was head of the counterintelligence department for a division of the FSB based in Perm, Russia. In February 2022, Russian authorities arrested six men in the Perm region accused of selling stolen payment card data. They also seized multiple carding shops run by the gang, including Ferum Shop, Sky-Fraud, and Trump’s Dumps, a popular fraud store that invoked the 45th president’s likeness and promised to β€œmake credit card fraud great again.”

All of the domains seized in that raid were registered by an IT consulting company in Perm called Get-net LLC, which was owned in part by Artem Zaitsev β€” one of the six men arrested. Zaitsev reportedly was a well-known programmer whose company supplied services and leasing to the local FSB field office.

The message for Trump’s Dumps users left behind by Russian authorities that seized the domain in 2022.

Russian news sites report that Internal Affairs officials with the FSB grew suspicious when Tsaregorodtsev became a little too interested in the case following the hacking group’s arrests. The former FSB agent had reportedly assured the hackers he could have their case transferred and that they would soon be free.

But when that promised freedom didn’t materialize, four the of the defendants pulled the walls down on the scheme and brought down their own roof. The FSB arrested Tsaregorodtsev, and seized $154,000 in cash, 100 gold bars, real estate and expensive cars.

At Tsaregorodtsev’s trial, his lawyers argued that their client wasn’t guilty of bribery per se, but that he did admit to fraud because he was ultimately unable to fully perform the services for which he’d been hired.

The Russian news outlet Kommersant reports that all four of those who cooperated were released with probation or correctional labor. Zaitsev received a sentence of 3.5 years in prison, and defendant Alexander Kovalev got four years.

In 2017, KrebsOnSecurity profiled Trump’s Dumps, and found the contact address listed on the site was tied to an email address used to register more than a dozen domains that were made to look like legitimate Javascript calls many e-commerce sites routinely make to process transactions β€” such as β€œjs-link[dot]su,” β€œjs-stat[dot]su,” and β€œjs-mod[dot]su.”

Searching on those malicious domains revealed a 2016 report from RiskIQ, which shows the domains featured prominently in a series of hacking campaigns against e-commerce websites. According to RiskIQ, the attacks targeted online stores running outdated and unpatched versions of shopping cart software from Magento, Powerfront and OpenCart.

Those shopping cart flaws allowed the crooks to install β€œweb skimmers,” malicious Javascript used to steal credit card details and other information from payment forms on the checkout pages of vulnerable e-commerce sites. The stolen customer payment card details were then sold on sites like Trump’s Dumps and Sky-Fraud.

The Next US President Will Have Troubling New Surveillance Powers

By Dell Cameron
Over the weekend, President Joe Biden signed legislation not only reauthorizing a major FISA spy program but expanding it in ways that could have major implications for privacy rights in the US.

North Koreans Secretly Animated Amazon and Max Shows, Researchers Say

By Matt Burgess
Thousands of exposed files on a misconfigured North Korean server hint at one way the reclusive country may evade international sanctions.

AI-Controlled Fighter Jets Are Dogfighting With Human Pilots Now

By Dell Cameron, Andrew Couts
Plus: New York’s legislature suffers a cyberattack, police disrupt a global phishing operation, and Apple removes encrypted messaging apps in China.

The Biggest Deepfake Porn Website Is Now Blocked in the UK

By Matt Burgess
The world's most-visited deepfake website and another large competing site are stopping people in the UK from accessing them, days after the UK government announced a crackdown.

The Trump Jury Has a Doxing Problem

By Andrew Couts
One juror in former US president Donald Trump’s criminal case in New York has been excused over fears she could be identified. It could get even messier.

The Real-Time Deepfake Romance Scams Have Arrived

By Matt Burgess
Watch how smooth-talking scammers known as β€œYahoo Boys” use widely available face-swapping tech to carry out elaborate romance scams.
❌