week in security

A week in security (February 15 – February 21)

Last week on Malwarebytes Labs, the spotlight fell on the State of Malware 2021 report, wherein we have seen cyberthreats evolve.

We also touched on ransomware, such as Egregor and a tactic known as Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) brute forcing that has long been part of the ransomware operators’ toolkit; insider threats, such as what Yandex recently experienced with one of its own sysadmins; romance scams; and put social media under scrutiny—looking at you, Clubhouse and Omegle; some wins for the good guys; and course, Cyberpunk 2077.

Other cybersecurity news

  • Following the water supply hack in a Florida city, the US government warned critical infrastructure operators to upgrade their Windows 7 operating systems. (Source: Security Week)
  • Baby monitor vulnerabilities are in the spotlight once again after the cybersecurity team at SafetyDetectives, an independent review site, unearthed a flaw that allows miscreants to take over a camera’s video stream. (Source: SafetyDetectives)
  • Phishers used “financial bonus” as lure to deliver the Bazar Trojan. (Source: ZDNet)
  • Speaking of phishing scams, they’re also promising free COVID vaccines. Again. (Source: Infosecurity Magazine)
  • Intelligence officials from South Korea claimed that North Korea is behind the COVID vaccine cyberattack against Pfizer. (Source: Computer Weekly)
  • A flaw in Agora, a voice and video platform, was discovered that could allow attackers to spy on private calls. (Source: CyberScoop)
  • Palo Alto’s Unit42 uncovered a cryptojacking campaign that has been in operation for the last couple of years. (Source: Palo Alto Networks)
  • ScamClub, a malvertising group, was discovered using an iPhone browser bug to push ads. (Source: Confiant)
  • With the introduction of Apple’s M1 computer processors, new malware made for them is starting to emerge. (Source: Motherboard)

Stay safe, everyone!

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