LockBit's Ransomware Rampage Reignites the Fire
Ransomware's not dead—it's thriving. LockBit just notched 62 hits in July, mocking last year's crackdowns.
In-depth coverage of the latest Security Tools developments, trends, and analysis — curated daily.
Ransomware's not dead—it's thriving. LockBit just notched 62 hits in July, mocking last year's crackdowns.
Apple's dropping backported patches for the DarkSword hacking tool onto iOS 18 devices. It's a rare concession—driven by hackers and haters of the new 'liquid glass' mess.
Chrome's bleeding zero-days. This one's in Dawn, and hackers are already feasting. Patch fast—or else.
Your inbox just got riskier if you're Ukrainian. Hackers dressed as the nation's top cyber cops to shove a sneaky RAT called AGEWHEEZE at a million emails — and they're bragging about it.
Our honeypots caught dozens of probes yesterday alone, all wielding CVE-2025-30208 against Vite's @fs shortcut. Devs: your quick-setup tool just became a backdoor.
Apple's finally armoring older iPhones against DarkSword, that nasty exploit kit from state hackers. Cynics like me? We're asking if automatic updates will save the day – or if the damage is done.
Apple swore iPhones were the secure choice. Now two zero-days prove otherwise, with exploits already in the wild. Time to hit update, folks.
Attackers are chaining tiny flaws into massive backdoors, while Android rootkits burrow deep into millions of devices. This week's ThreatsDay Bulletin reveals the raw mechanics of modern threats—no hype, just the fixes you need now.
Imagine your video call app turning into a hacker's playground. That's TrueConf's nightmare: a zero-day flaw letting attackers poison updates across government networks.
Forget static phishing lures. Brazilian crooks are cranking out custom PDFs on the fly to slip Casbaneiro banking trojans past enterprise gates. It's not just consumers anymore.
A single USB drive lit the fuse, but three separate China-aligned crews kept the fire burning across a Southeast Asian government's network for months. This isn't random—it's a masterclass in divided ops.
CISA's Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog just grew by one: a Palo Alto firewall bug that's already drawing fire from attackers. Patch by September 9, or risk becoming the next DDoS reflector.