Listings for GitHub access, leaked repositories, and stolen API keys can appear long before a software supply-chain problem becomes visible inside an organization.
Crypto venues are turning interest in SpaceX pre-IPO exposure into synthetic products, showing how fast valuation narratives can outgrow the guardrails around them.
Malicious lookalike packages in the npm ecosystem can turn routine dependency installs into a supply-chain execution event for Web3 teams and crypto wallet operators.
The disruption of AudiA6 shows how ransomware ecosystems depend on a second layer of crime: services built to wash illicit crypto profits.
A coordinated law-enforcement action against a suspected laundering service puts the spotlight on the infrastructure that helps illicit crypto move, layer, and reach spendable value.
An INTERPOL-led operation disrupted Sniper Dz, a phishing-as-a-service platform, and the case shows how modern phishing is built like infrastructure, not just spam.
Federal action against AudiA6 and Dark2Web underscores a basic truth of crypto crime: even when identities look abstract, the financial record can still become evidence.
A package-based credential theft campaign shows how quickly trusted registries can become entry points when attackers dress malware up as a build fix or SDK helper.
A coordinated international operation has disrupted AudiA6, a cryptocurrency laundering service believed to have moved more than EUR 336 million and helped criminal networks turn stolen value into spendable money.