CISA Emergency Directive Orders Mitigations After Microsoft Breach
The U.S. government has made public an emergency directive that it issued last week for federal agencies, ordering them to take
In her previous position at Threatpost, Lindsey covered all aspects of the cybersecurity industry - from data privacy regulatory efforts to the evolution of underground cybercriminal marketplaces. Prior to that, Lindsey specialized in writing about microprocessors, enterprise business technology and the Internet of Things at CRN. In Lindsey’s spare time, she enjoys playing tennis and traveling.
The U.S. government has made public an emergency directive that it issued last week for federal agencies, ordering them to take
The XZ Utils backdoor was a very subtle operation that took several years to pull off, and while some of the technical details are
CISA has laid out the proposed details of the Cyber Incident Reporting for Critical Infrastructure Act (CIRCIA).
A known APT espionage group known as Daggerfly has updated its toolset in a number of recent attacks against organizations in Taiwan, as well as a U.S. non-governmental organization in China.
In a Friday statement, CISA said that it has observed threat actors taking advantage of the massive global outages, linked to a faulty CrowdStrike update, for phishing “and other malicious activity.”
APT41 compromised multiple organizations in the shipping and logistics, media, technology and automotive sectors.
Members of the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Privacy, Technology and the Law asked AT&T’s CEO “about how AT&T failed to protect such profoundly sensitive information from cybercriminals.”
The attack started on June 6 when a threat actor impersonated a company employee in order to their compromise business credentials.