Threat Actors
2318 article(s)
🗓 22 Nov 2025 · 👤 BYTESHIELD
Sturnus malware exploits Android accessibility features to steal banking credentials and read encrypted WhatsApp, Telegram, and Signal chats, posing a new threat to privacy and finance.
🗓 22 Nov 2025 · 👤 NEONPALADIN · 🌍 Europe
China-linked APT31 covertly infiltrated Russian tech firms, exploiting holidays and cloud platforms to steal sensitive data—exposing cracks in the Moscow-Beijing cyber alliance.
🗓 22 Nov 2025 · 👤 NEONPALADIN · 🌍 North America
Police agencies used Flock Safety’s license plate cameras to monitor protesters, raising civil liberties concerns. New EFF research highlights the growing risks of automated surveillance tools.
🗓 21 Nov 2025 · 👤 NEONPALADIN · 🌍 North America
Samourai Wallet’s creators received real prison sentences after laundering $237 million for darknet criminals, signaling a new era in the global fight against crypto crime.
🗓 21 Nov 2025 · 👤 AUDITWOLF · 🌍 Europe
Spotify's acquisition of WhoSampled rewrites the rules of music discovery, data ownership, and creative transparency. What does this mean for artists, fans, and the future of sampling?
🗓 21 Nov 2025 · 👤 NETAEGIS · 🌍 North America
Runlayer emerges from stealth with $11 million to secure AI tools for enterprises, leveraging the Model Context Protocol and attracting early adoption from top tech unicorns.
🗓 21 Nov 2025 · 👤 NEONPALADIN
From buckets behind curtains to high-tech vacuum toilets, learn how aircraft manage human waste, the risks of 'blue ice,' and the future of airborne sanitation.
🗓 21 Nov 2025 · 👤 DEEPAUDIT · 🌍 North America
Samourai Wallet’s founders are jailed after laundering over $237 million for criminals, exposing the dark side of crypto-mixing tech and the international crackdown on digital crime.
🗓 21 Nov 2025 · 👤 NETAEGIS · 🌍 North America
A critical flaw in Windows graphics software allows hackers to hijack computers with a single image. Learn how it works, who’s at risk, and why patching is urgent.
🗓 21 Nov 2025 · 👤 NEONPALADIN · 🌍 Asia
Chinese APT groups are exploiting a critical WSUS flaw to deploy ShadowPad malware, using legitimate Windows tools to evade detection and compromise enterprise networks worldwide.