• Landing Page
  • Shop
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Login
  • Register
Upgrade
TrivDaily
">
  • WorldNew
    Pound

    Pound hits 37-year low against dollar

    Palm Trees - Wind

    Hurricane Tracker : Tropical Storm Hurricane Nine has the potential to reach Florida

    Prince Of Wales - Trivdaily

    Princess Diana’s title has been passed on to the Duchess of Cambridge

    Trivdaily - King Charles Speech

    3 main points to be gleaned from King Charles first public speech

    Abdul Qadeer Khan: ‘Father Of Pakistan’S Nuclear Bomb’ Dies

    Abdul Qadeer Khan: ‘Father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb’ dies

    The Afghanistan Airport Explosion Came About Beneathneath Biden However Lines Lower Back To Trump

    The Afghanistan airport explosion came about beneathneath Biden however lines lower back to Trump

    Hibernian  Beat Arsenal 2-1 In First Preseason Game On Easter Road

    Hibernian beat Arsenal 2-1 in first preseason game on Easter Road

    After A “Racist” Tweet Against England Black Players, Comedian Andrew Lawrence’S Agent Cancelled His Appearance In Show.

    After a “racist” tweet against England black players, comedian Andrew Lawrence’s agent cancelled his appearance in show.

    Lionel Messi, Argentina Win Copa America Over Brazil

    Lionel Messi, Argentina win Copa America over Brazil

    Trending Tags

    • Lifestyle
      Nursing Union Accepts Scottish Government Pay Offer

      Nursing union accepts Scottish government pay offer

      Saudi Arabia Gp: Sergio Perez Holds Off Max Verstappen As Red Bull Dominate

      Saudi Arabia GP: Sergio Perez holds off Max Verstappen as Red Bull dominate

      Overworked Nhs Staff Being Driven To Suicide With One Life Lost Every Three Days

      Overworked NHS staff being driven to suicide with one life lost every three days

      M40 Delays After Lorry Overturns At Oxfordshire Junction

      M40 delays after lorry overturns at Oxfordshire junction

      Wall Street Giants Poised To Rescue First Republic In $30Bn Deal

      Wall Street giants poised to rescue First Republic in $30bn deal

      Former Grenadier Guard Admits Defeat In Battle To Drag His Clifftop Home130 Feet Back From The Brink

      Former Grenadier Guard admits defeat in battle to drag his clifftop home130 feet back from the brink

      Trending Tags

      • Pandemic
    • Business
      World Down Syndrome Day 2023: Find Out Its Causes, Symptoms And Treatments

      World Down Syndrome Day 2023: Find out its causes, symptoms and treatments

      Transfer Rumours: Lionel Messi Wants To Return To Barcelona After Fall-Out With Psg Boss

      Transfer Rumours: Lionel Messi wants to return to Barcelona after fall-out with PSG boss

      Voice Call Verification Technology: How It Works And Why You Need It

      Voice Call Verification Technology: How It Works and Why You Need It

      Google To Enter The Foldable Phone Niche With Pixel Fold Launch In June: Report

      Google to enter the foldable phone niche with Pixel Fold launch in June: report

      Hsbc’S Acquisition Of Svb Uk A ‘Big Sigh Of Relief’ For Tech Startups

      HSBC’s acquisition of SVB UK a ‘big sigh of relief’ for tech startups

      Two Snp Candidates State Rowling Is A ‘National Treasure’ Despite ‘Harry Potter’ Author’S Transphobic Views

      Two SNP candidates state Rowling is a ‘national treasure’ despite ‘Harry Potter’ author’s transphobic views

      Trending Tags

      • Vaccine
      • Pandemic
    • Entertainment
      There’s A Reason Mcdonald’s Coke Tastes So Different

      There’s a reason McDonald’s coke tastes so different

      The Wire And John Wick Star Lance Reddick Has Died Aged 60

      The Wire and John Wick star Lance Reddick has died aged 60

      What Happened To Daphne And Celeste After Being Bottled Off Stage At Reading Festival

      What happened to Daphne and Celeste after being bottled off stage at Reading Festival

      Man Given 400-Year Prison Sentence Freed After Serving 34 Years

      Man given 400-year prison sentence freed after serving 34 years

      Andrew Tate Denied Bail At Hearing And Will Remain In Prison

      Andrew Tate denied bail at hearing and will remain in prison

      Gary Glitter Recalled To Prison After ‘Using Smartphone To Ask About Dark Web’

      Gary Glitter recalled to prison after ‘using smartphone to ask about Dark Web’

      Junior Doctors’ Outrage As It’S Revealed Pret Pays More

      Junior doctors’ outrage as it’s revealed Pret pays more

      Bbc News Presenter Heckled By Passerby On Live Tv Shouting ‘Bring Back Gary Lineker’

      BBC news presenter heckled by passerby on live TV shouting ‘bring back Gary Lineker’

      Irish Talent Hopes For Oscars Success Against Everything Everywhere All At Once

      Irish talent hopes for Oscars success against Everything Everywhere All At Once

      Trending Tags

      • Sports
        Colby Covington: ‘Leon Edwards Is The Biggest Cheater I’ve Ever Seen’

        Colby Covington: ‘Leon Edwards is the biggest cheater I’ve ever seen’

        Ufc 286 Highlights Video: Justin Gaethje Vs Raphael Fiziev

        UFC 286 highlights video: Justin Gaethje vs Raphael Fiziev

        March Madness: Dawn Staley’S Cheyney Jersey ‘Means A Lot’ To Head Coach Alishia Mosley’S Team

        March Madness: Dawn Staley’s Cheyney jersey ‘means a lot’ to head coach Alishia Mosley’s team

        Capel And The Seniors Reflect On Pitt’S 84-73 Loss To Xavier

        Capel and the seniors reflect on Pitt’s 84-73 loss to Xavier

        No. 16 Fairleigh Dickinson Stuns No. 1 Purdue in Historic Upset

        Things Went Terribly Wrong for an Italian Hitter Against Shohei Ohtani

        No. 15 Princeton Stifles No. 2 Arizona In Shocking NCAA Tournament Upset

        Nba Suspends Ja Morant For Eight Games After Probe Into Video

        NBA Suspends Ja Morant for Eight Games After Probe Into Video

        Ncaa Wrestling: Live Updates And Results From Iowa, Iowa St., Uni Wrestlers In Session 1

        NCAA Wrestling: Live updates and results from Iowa, Iowa St., UNI wrestlers in Session 1

        Trending Tags

        • Travel
          Video – On This Day, Trezeguet Displayed His Clinical Touch In Livorno

          Video – On this day, Trezeguet displayed his clinical touch in Livorno

          Imran Khan Mobbed By Supporters As He Leaves For Court

          Imran Khan mobbed by supporters as he leaves for court

          Warning Of Passport Delays As Union Calls Five-Week Strike

          Warning of passport delays as union calls five-week strike

          Tottenham Unwilling To Sell Star This Summer Regardless Of Contract Situation

          Tottenham unwilling to sell star this summer regardless of contract situation

          The Best Travel Cots Of 2023 Tried And Tested, Including Lightweight And Playpen Options

          The best travel cots of 2023 tried and tested, including lightweight and playpen options

          Track Of The Day 10/3 – Alice Phoebe Lou

          Track Of The Day 10/3 – Alice Phoebe Lou

          Trending Tags

          • Technology
            Bianlian Ransomware Crew Goes 100% Extortion After Free Decryptor Lands

            BianLian ransomware crew goes 100% extortion after free decryptor lands

            Microsoft Pushes Out Powershell Scripts To Fix Bitlocker Bypass

            Microsoft pushes out PowerShell scripts to fix BitLocker bypass

            Willem Dafoe Would Return To The Spider-Verse Again

            Willem Dafoe Would Return to the Spider-Verse Again

            Jack Champion’s Supernatural Fandom | First Fandoms

            Jack Champion’s Supernatural Fandom | First Fandoms

            Alex Jones’ Alleged Secret Site Gets Around Social Media Bans

            Alex Jones’ Alleged Secret Site Gets Around Social Media Bans

            Dc Comics’ Wonderful Swimsuit Covers Are Sexy And Tasteful

            DC Comics’ Wonderful Swimsuit Covers Are Sexy and Tasteful

            Trending Tags

            • Real Estate
              Malaysia Plans To Open Worldwide Tourism On December 1

              Malaysia Plans To Open Worldwide Tourism On December 1

              #1 Uk Housing: Renting Has Turn Out To Be Less Expensive Than Shopping

              #1 UK housing: renting has turn out to be less expensive than shopping

              Uk Assets Marketplace Pastime Maintains At Record-Breaking Levels

              UK assets marketplace pastime maintains at record-breaking levels

              Guud Launches New Ryte Financing Platform To Make Trade Finance Accessible For All Businesses

              GUUD Launches New RYTE Financing Platform To Make Trade Finance Accessible for All Businesses

              Climate Finance Partnership Raises Us$250 Million At First Close To Invest In Emerging Market Climate Infrastructure

              Climate Finance Partnership Raises US$250 Million at First Close to Invest in Emerging Market Climate Infrastructure

              Interior Jennifer Lopez’s Luxe Miami Rental: 5 Stress-Free Details In Regards To The Mansion

              Interior Jennifer Lopez’s luxe Miami rental: 5 stress-free details in regards to the mansion

              Trending Tags

              No Result
              View All Result
              • WorldNew
                Pound

                Pound hits 37-year low against dollar

                Palm Trees - Wind

                Hurricane Tracker : Tropical Storm Hurricane Nine has the potential to reach Florida

                Prince Of Wales - Trivdaily

                Princess Diana’s title has been passed on to the Duchess of Cambridge

                Trivdaily - King Charles Speech

                3 main points to be gleaned from King Charles first public speech

                Abdul Qadeer Khan: ‘Father Of Pakistan’S Nuclear Bomb’ Dies

                Abdul Qadeer Khan: ‘Father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb’ dies

                The Afghanistan Airport Explosion Came About Beneathneath Biden However Lines Lower Back To Trump

                The Afghanistan airport explosion came about beneathneath Biden however lines lower back to Trump

                Hibernian  Beat Arsenal 2-1 In First Preseason Game On Easter Road

                Hibernian beat Arsenal 2-1 in first preseason game on Easter Road

                After A “Racist” Tweet Against England Black Players, Comedian Andrew Lawrence’S Agent Cancelled His Appearance In Show.

                After a “racist” tweet against England black players, comedian Andrew Lawrence’s agent cancelled his appearance in show.

                Lionel Messi, Argentina Win Copa America Over Brazil

                Lionel Messi, Argentina win Copa America over Brazil

                Trending Tags

                • Lifestyle
                  Nursing Union Accepts Scottish Government Pay Offer

                  Nursing union accepts Scottish government pay offer

                  Saudi Arabia Gp: Sergio Perez Holds Off Max Verstappen As Red Bull Dominate

                  Saudi Arabia GP: Sergio Perez holds off Max Verstappen as Red Bull dominate

                  Overworked Nhs Staff Being Driven To Suicide With One Life Lost Every Three Days

                  Overworked NHS staff being driven to suicide with one life lost every three days

                  M40 Delays After Lorry Overturns At Oxfordshire Junction

                  M40 delays after lorry overturns at Oxfordshire junction

                  Wall Street Giants Poised To Rescue First Republic In $30Bn Deal

                  Wall Street giants poised to rescue First Republic in $30bn deal

                  Former Grenadier Guard Admits Defeat In Battle To Drag His Clifftop Home130 Feet Back From The Brink

                  Former Grenadier Guard admits defeat in battle to drag his clifftop home130 feet back from the brink

                  Trending Tags

                  • Pandemic
                • Business
                  World Down Syndrome Day 2023: Find Out Its Causes, Symptoms And Treatments

                  World Down Syndrome Day 2023: Find out its causes, symptoms and treatments

                  Transfer Rumours: Lionel Messi Wants To Return To Barcelona After Fall-Out With Psg Boss

                  Transfer Rumours: Lionel Messi wants to return to Barcelona after fall-out with PSG boss

                  Voice Call Verification Technology: How It Works And Why You Need It

                  Voice Call Verification Technology: How It Works and Why You Need It

                  Google To Enter The Foldable Phone Niche With Pixel Fold Launch In June: Report

                  Google to enter the foldable phone niche with Pixel Fold launch in June: report

                  Hsbc’S Acquisition Of Svb Uk A ‘Big Sigh Of Relief’ For Tech Startups

                  HSBC’s acquisition of SVB UK a ‘big sigh of relief’ for tech startups

                  Two Snp Candidates State Rowling Is A ‘National Treasure’ Despite ‘Harry Potter’ Author’S Transphobic Views

                  Two SNP candidates state Rowling is a ‘national treasure’ despite ‘Harry Potter’ author’s transphobic views

                  Trending Tags

                  • Vaccine
                  • Pandemic
                • Entertainment
                  There’s A Reason Mcdonald’s Coke Tastes So Different

                  There’s a reason McDonald’s coke tastes so different

                  The Wire And John Wick Star Lance Reddick Has Died Aged 60

                  The Wire and John Wick star Lance Reddick has died aged 60

                  What Happened To Daphne And Celeste After Being Bottled Off Stage At Reading Festival

                  What happened to Daphne and Celeste after being bottled off stage at Reading Festival

                  Man Given 400-Year Prison Sentence Freed After Serving 34 Years

                  Man given 400-year prison sentence freed after serving 34 years

                  Andrew Tate Denied Bail At Hearing And Will Remain In Prison

                  Andrew Tate denied bail at hearing and will remain in prison

                  Gary Glitter Recalled To Prison After ‘Using Smartphone To Ask About Dark Web’

                  Gary Glitter recalled to prison after ‘using smartphone to ask about Dark Web’

                  Junior Doctors’ Outrage As It’S Revealed Pret Pays More

                  Junior doctors’ outrage as it’s revealed Pret pays more

                  Bbc News Presenter Heckled By Passerby On Live Tv Shouting ‘Bring Back Gary Lineker’

                  BBC news presenter heckled by passerby on live TV shouting ‘bring back Gary Lineker’

                  Irish Talent Hopes For Oscars Success Against Everything Everywhere All At Once

                  Irish talent hopes for Oscars success against Everything Everywhere All At Once

                  Trending Tags

                  • Sports
                    Colby Covington: ‘Leon Edwards Is The Biggest Cheater I’ve Ever Seen’

                    Colby Covington: ‘Leon Edwards is the biggest cheater I’ve ever seen’

                    Ufc 286 Highlights Video: Justin Gaethje Vs Raphael Fiziev

                    UFC 286 highlights video: Justin Gaethje vs Raphael Fiziev

                    March Madness: Dawn Staley’S Cheyney Jersey ‘Means A Lot’ To Head Coach Alishia Mosley’S Team

                    March Madness: Dawn Staley’s Cheyney jersey ‘means a lot’ to head coach Alishia Mosley’s team

                    Capel And The Seniors Reflect On Pitt’S 84-73 Loss To Xavier

                    Capel and the seniors reflect on Pitt’s 84-73 loss to Xavier

                    No. 16 Fairleigh Dickinson Stuns No. 1 Purdue in Historic Upset

                    Things Went Terribly Wrong for an Italian Hitter Against Shohei Ohtani

                    No. 15 Princeton Stifles No. 2 Arizona In Shocking NCAA Tournament Upset

                    Nba Suspends Ja Morant For Eight Games After Probe Into Video

                    NBA Suspends Ja Morant for Eight Games After Probe Into Video

                    Ncaa Wrestling: Live Updates And Results From Iowa, Iowa St., Uni Wrestlers In Session 1

                    NCAA Wrestling: Live updates and results from Iowa, Iowa St., UNI wrestlers in Session 1

                    Trending Tags

                    • Travel
                      Video – On This Day, Trezeguet Displayed His Clinical Touch In Livorno

                      Video – On this day, Trezeguet displayed his clinical touch in Livorno

                      Imran Khan Mobbed By Supporters As He Leaves For Court

                      Imran Khan mobbed by supporters as he leaves for court

                      Warning Of Passport Delays As Union Calls Five-Week Strike

                      Warning of passport delays as union calls five-week strike

                      Tottenham Unwilling To Sell Star This Summer Regardless Of Contract Situation

                      Tottenham unwilling to sell star this summer regardless of contract situation

                      The Best Travel Cots Of 2023 Tried And Tested, Including Lightweight And Playpen Options

                      The best travel cots of 2023 tried and tested, including lightweight and playpen options

                      Track Of The Day 10/3 – Alice Phoebe Lou

                      Track Of The Day 10/3 – Alice Phoebe Lou

                      Trending Tags

                      • Technology
                        Bianlian Ransomware Crew Goes 100% Extortion After Free Decryptor Lands

                        BianLian ransomware crew goes 100% extortion after free decryptor lands

                        Microsoft Pushes Out Powershell Scripts To Fix Bitlocker Bypass

                        Microsoft pushes out PowerShell scripts to fix BitLocker bypass

                        Willem Dafoe Would Return To The Spider-Verse Again

                        Willem Dafoe Would Return to the Spider-Verse Again

                        Jack Champion’s Supernatural Fandom | First Fandoms

                        Jack Champion’s Supernatural Fandom | First Fandoms

                        Alex Jones’ Alleged Secret Site Gets Around Social Media Bans

                        Alex Jones’ Alleged Secret Site Gets Around Social Media Bans

                        Dc Comics’ Wonderful Swimsuit Covers Are Sexy And Tasteful

                        DC Comics’ Wonderful Swimsuit Covers Are Sexy and Tasteful

                        Trending Tags

                        • Real Estate
                          Malaysia Plans To Open Worldwide Tourism On December 1

                          Malaysia Plans To Open Worldwide Tourism On December 1

                          #1 Uk Housing: Renting Has Turn Out To Be Less Expensive Than Shopping

                          #1 UK housing: renting has turn out to be less expensive than shopping

                          Uk Assets Marketplace Pastime Maintains At Record-Breaking Levels

                          UK assets marketplace pastime maintains at record-breaking levels

                          Guud Launches New Ryte Financing Platform To Make Trade Finance Accessible For All Businesses

                          GUUD Launches New RYTE Financing Platform To Make Trade Finance Accessible for All Businesses

                          Climate Finance Partnership Raises Us$250 Million At First Close To Invest In Emerging Market Climate Infrastructure

                          Climate Finance Partnership Raises US$250 Million at First Close to Invest in Emerging Market Climate Infrastructure

                          Interior Jennifer Lopez’s Luxe Miami Rental: 5 Stress-Free Details In Regards To The Mansion

                          Interior Jennifer Lopez’s luxe Miami rental: 5 stress-free details in regards to the mansion

                          Trending Tags

                          No Result
                          View All Result
                          TrivDaily
                          No Result
                          View All Result
                          Home Technology

                          Tim Hortons offer free coffee and donut to settle data privacy invasion claims

                          Ferhan Rana by Ferhan Rana
                          July 31, 2022
                          in Technology
                          Reading Time:6 mins read
                          30.2k 1.6k
                          A A
                          0
                          Tim Hortons Offer Free Coffee And Donut To Settle Data Privacy Invasion Claims
                          29.7k
                          SHARES
                          33.8k
                          VIEWS
                          Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
                          ">

                          In brief Canadian fast food chain Tim Hortons is settling multiple data privacy class-action lawsuits against it by offering something it knows it’s good for: a donut and coffee.

                          The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) said Friday that Timmies’ agreement still requires approval from the courts, but if given the go ahead, Tim Hortons mobile app users affected by the chain’s improper data collection will “receive a free hot beverage and baked good.”

                          Tim Hortons will also have to permanently delete any geolocation data its apps improperly collected, and must instruct third party providers who had access to the data to do the same. 

                          Between May 2019 and August 2020, Tim Hortons’ mobile apps collected geolocation data from users without their knowledge or consent, a Canadian government investigation discovered.

                          According to that probe, Tim Hortons updated its apps to specifically add location tracking technology managed by a US company called Radar. That biz collected information from devices every few minutes to infer customers’ home and work locations and see if they were buying donuts elsewhere. 

                          The app continued to gather data even when it was in the background and only stopped if the app was quit, the investigation found. 

                          Tim Hortons said it never used the geolocation data it gathered to target ads, and permanently removed Radar’s code from its apps in September 2020. “The very limited use of this data was on an aggregated, de-identified basis to study trends in our business – and the results did not contain personal information from any guests,” Tim Hortons said in June when lawsuits started landing against it.

                          By Canadian pricing, affected Tim Hortons customers can expect a class-action settlement to pay out approximately C$2.88 ($2.25) in free food and beverages, which could very well be more than class members could expect to get in cash.

                          Kaspersky has detailed UEFI firmware-level malware dubbed CosmicStrand. This rootkit hides in firmware images of Gigabyte or ASUS motherboards, and has been seen in private individuals’ systems in China, Vietnam, Iran, and Russia. When Windows boots on an infected machine, CosmicStrand alters the kernel, allowing it to silently gain control of the computer and its applications, and communicate with a remote command-and-control server.

                          Cyber-scum agree: Container files are the new macros

                          While Microsoft is battling to stem the abuse of Office macros, cybercriminals are now turning to crafting malicious container files to infect victims with malware. And by container files, we mean things like disc images and archives, not Docker containers and the like.

                          According to research by Proofpoint, the use of Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) and XL4 macros to launch attacks against Microsoft Office users has dropped by 66 percent since October 2021, when Microsoft announced plans to block macros in downloaded Office files, Proofpoint said. 

                          “From October 2021 through June 2022, threat actors have pivoted away from macro-enabled documents attached directly to messages to deliver malware, and have increasingly used container files such as ISO and RAR attachments and Windows Shortcut (LNK) files,” Proofpoint said. 

                          Over the same time period Proofpoint tracked the decline in macro attacks, it said that container file attacks rose by 175 percent. “More than half of the 15 tracked threat actors that used ISO files in this time began using them in campaigns after January 2022,” Proofpoint said. Attacks involving LNK files have risen, too.

                          Along with a spike in attackers emailing malicious container files, Proofpoint said it also noticed a slight increase in the use of HTML attachments to transmit malware. While the number of HTML attachment attacks more than doubled in the period Proofpoint examined for its report, overall numbers remain low, it said. 

                          Microsoft began blocking internet-sourced Office macros earlier this year, though the change was temporarily rolled back in early July due to usability complaints. As of July 22, macro blocking has been re-enabled.

                          Proofpoint believes container files are likely to become the new standard for launching email attacks, so get ready to start blocking those, if you’re not already.

                          “Proofpoint researchers assess with high confidence this is one of the largest email threat landscape shifts in recent history,” the outfit said. 

                          Robin Banks: Easier than ever

                          A new phishing-as-a-service platform has emerged, and its purpose is right in its name: Robin Banks.

                          First spotted by researchers at IronNet, Robin Banks gained additional attention when the security biz found it to be behind a large-scale phishing campaign targeting Citibank customers and also trying to steal Microsoft account credentials. 

                          Robin Banks sells ready-made phishing kits focused on stealing financial account information from victims, hosts all the necessary infrastructure to run attacks for its customers, and has customization features so users can build their own phishing kits. 

                          In order to access the platform, crooks have to pay $50 a month for a single phishing page, or $200 a month for a broader package.

                          Robin Banks primarily targets US financial institutions, and has templates for Bank of America, Capital One, Citibank, and more. It also offers templates for Lloyds Bank and Australia’s Commonwealth Bank. Netflix, Microsoft, and Google account templates are also available.

                          A June campaign that tipped IronNet researchers off to Robin Banks’ level of activity was reportedly “very successful,” with numerous victims having their account information sold on the dark web or Telegram, the researchers said. The researchers believe the campaign is still expanding. 

                          IronNet said that Robin Banks isn’t particularly sophisticated, but stands out because it offers 24/7 support and has a “distinct dedication to pushing updates, fixing bugs, and adding features to its kits,” IronNet said. 

                          Based on its research, IronNet said that Robin Banks appears to be primarily focused on selling phishing kits to basic users motivated solely by profit. “Cyber criminals using the Robin Banks kit often post the monetary data of their victims on Telegram and other various websites, listing the hacked account balances of various victims,” IronNet said. 

                          While the report doesn’t reveal who’s behind Robin Banks nor indicate where they may be located, IronNet said their investigation has identified potential suspects. IronNet was also able to estimate how much money Robin Banks’ users have gained illicit access to via the platform: more than $500,000, a number it said is rising daily.

                          Expect Robin Banks to react to its publicity, too, IronNet said: “Given the criminal operator’s clear dedication to managing and improving the platform, we suspect the threat actor behind Robin Banks to change tactics or toolings as a result of this report.”

                          North Korean malware steals emails as you read them

                          A well-established North Korean cyber-gang known as SharpTongue has adopted a heretofore undocumented malware family able to steal email and attachments while victims read them.

                          The new malware, named SHARPEXT by researchers at Volexity who apparently discovered it, exists as an extension for Chromium-based Microsoft Edge, Chrome, and Whale, a web browser that is little used outside South Korea. 

                          Unlike previous SharpTongue campaigns, SHARPEXT doesn’t attempt to steal any credentials. “Rather, the malware directly inspects and exfiltrates data from a victim’s webmail account as they browse it,” Volexity said. Gmail and AOL webmail are the only two services targeted by SHARPEXT.

                          SHARPEXT is the first malicious browser extension that Volexity has observed being installed as part of the post-exploitation phase of an attack. Installing the extension is a manual process, carried out by miscreants on a Windows PC once it’s been compromised.

                          “By stealing email data in the context of a user’s already-logged-in session, the attack is hidden from the email provider, making detection very challenging. Similarly, the way in which the extension works means suspicious activity would not be logged in a user’s email ‘account activity’ status page, were they to review it,” Volexity said. 

                          SharpTongue has been deploying SHARPEXT for over a year, Volexity said. To help combat this malware, Volexity has provided links to YARA rules and IOCs in its report. The researchers also recommend enabling and analyzing the results of PowerShell ScriptBlock logging, as PowerShell is used in the SHARPEXT installation process, and regularly reviewing installed browser extensions for ones loaded from outside the Chrome Web Store. 

                          No More Ransom celebrates 6 years and 1.5m decryptions

                          No More Ransom, a joint initiative between law enforcement agencies and cybersecurity firms that distributes free ransomware decryption software, recently celebrated six years in operation, and claims that in that time it has liberated more than 1.5 million ransomware victims.

                          Founded in 2016, No More Ransom started with four partners – The Dutch Police, Europol, Kaspersky, and McAfee – and has since grown to 188 partners across law enforcement, cybersecurity and other industries. 

                          One hundred and thirty-six tools covering 165 ransomware families are available for download at NMR, and they’ve been collectively downloaded more than 10 million times, the project claims. 

                          Ransomware, which infects systems, encrypts files, often exfiltrates documents, and demands payment for decryption, is a serious problem that only continues to grow. A SonicWall report from earlier this year found a 105 percent rise in ransomware incidents in 2021 and a threefold increase from 2019. Ransomware attacks against government entities have grown even faster, with SonicWall seeing a 1,885 percent rise in such attacks over the same period. 

                          Other sectors leading in malware attacks include healthcare, which saw a 755 percent increase, a 152 percent rise in education, and a 21 percent increase in attacks against retail organizations, SonicWall said. 

                          Bitdefender, a member of No More Ransom, said it is one of the top five contributors of decryptors to the project. According to its own research, its decryptors have saved ransomware victims nearly $1 billion in payments. 

                          “The No More Ransom initiative is one of the best examples of how private and public sectors can partner together for the betterment of everyone from individuals to large corporations. Bitdefender is proud to play a part in this ongoing initiative,” the company said. 

                          Ransomware is often delivered via phishing attacks, and often targets known vulnerabilities. In an ideal world that would mean that most organizations are protected by regularly applied patches and properly trained users, but we’re not in an ideal world. 

                          Hopefully you won’t need No More Ransom’s services anytime soon, but it’s there, and active, if you do. ®

                          ">

                          In brief Canadian fast food chain Tim Hortons is settling multiple data privacy class-action lawsuits against it by offering something it knows it’s good for: a donut and coffee.

                          The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) said Friday that Timmies’ agreement still requires approval from the courts, but if given the go ahead, Tim Hortons mobile app users affected by the chain’s improper data collection will “receive a free hot beverage and baked good.”

                          Tim Hortons will also have to permanently delete any geolocation data its apps improperly collected, and must instruct third party providers who had access to the data to do the same. 

                          Between May 2019 and August 2020, Tim Hortons’ mobile apps collected geolocation data from users without their knowledge or consent, a Canadian government investigation discovered.

                          According to that probe, Tim Hortons updated its apps to specifically add location tracking technology managed by a US company called Radar. That biz collected information from devices every few minutes to infer customers’ home and work locations and see if they were buying donuts elsewhere. 

                          The app continued to gather data even when it was in the background and only stopped if the app was quit, the investigation found. 

                          Tim Hortons said it never used the geolocation data it gathered to target ads, and permanently removed Radar’s code from its apps in September 2020. “The very limited use of this data was on an aggregated, de-identified basis to study trends in our business – and the results did not contain personal information from any guests,” Tim Hortons said in June when lawsuits started landing against it.

                          By Canadian pricing, affected Tim Hortons customers can expect a class-action settlement to pay out approximately C$2.88 ($2.25) in free food and beverages, which could very well be more than class members could expect to get in cash.

                          Kaspersky has detailed UEFI firmware-level malware dubbed CosmicStrand. This rootkit hides in firmware images of Gigabyte or ASUS motherboards, and has been seen in private individuals’ systems in China, Vietnam, Iran, and Russia. When Windows boots on an infected machine, CosmicStrand alters the kernel, allowing it to silently gain control of the computer and its applications, and communicate with a remote command-and-control server.

                          Cyber-scum agree: Container files are the new macros

                          While Microsoft is battling to stem the abuse of Office macros, cybercriminals are now turning to crafting malicious container files to infect victims with malware. And by container files, we mean things like disc images and archives, not Docker containers and the like.

                          According to research by Proofpoint, the use of Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) and XL4 macros to launch attacks against Microsoft Office users has dropped by 66 percent since October 2021, when Microsoft announced plans to block macros in downloaded Office files, Proofpoint said. 

                          “From October 2021 through June 2022, threat actors have pivoted away from macro-enabled documents attached directly to messages to deliver malware, and have increasingly used container files such as ISO and RAR attachments and Windows Shortcut (LNK) files,” Proofpoint said. 

                          Over the same time period Proofpoint tracked the decline in macro attacks, it said that container file attacks rose by 175 percent. “More than half of the 15 tracked threat actors that used ISO files in this time began using them in campaigns after January 2022,” Proofpoint said. Attacks involving LNK files have risen, too.

                          Along with a spike in attackers emailing malicious container files, Proofpoint said it also noticed a slight increase in the use of HTML attachments to transmit malware. While the number of HTML attachment attacks more than doubled in the period Proofpoint examined for its report, overall numbers remain low, it said. 

                          Microsoft began blocking internet-sourced Office macros earlier this year, though the change was temporarily rolled back in early July due to usability complaints. As of July 22, macro blocking has been re-enabled.

                          Proofpoint believes container files are likely to become the new standard for launching email attacks, so get ready to start blocking those, if you’re not already.

                          “Proofpoint researchers assess with high confidence this is one of the largest email threat landscape shifts in recent history,” the outfit said. 

                          Robin Banks: Easier than ever

                          A new phishing-as-a-service platform has emerged, and its purpose is right in its name: Robin Banks.

                          First spotted by researchers at IronNet, Robin Banks gained additional attention when the security biz found it to be behind a large-scale phishing campaign targeting Citibank customers and also trying to steal Microsoft account credentials. 

                          Robin Banks sells ready-made phishing kits focused on stealing financial account information from victims, hosts all the necessary infrastructure to run attacks for its customers, and has customization features so users can build their own phishing kits. 

                          In order to access the platform, crooks have to pay $50 a month for a single phishing page, or $200 a month for a broader package.

                          Robin Banks primarily targets US financial institutions, and has templates for Bank of America, Capital One, Citibank, and more. It also offers templates for Lloyds Bank and Australia’s Commonwealth Bank. Netflix, Microsoft, and Google account templates are also available.

                          A June campaign that tipped IronNet researchers off to Robin Banks’ level of activity was reportedly “very successful,” with numerous victims having their account information sold on the dark web or Telegram, the researchers said. The researchers believe the campaign is still expanding. 

                          IronNet said that Robin Banks isn’t particularly sophisticated, but stands out because it offers 24/7 support and has a “distinct dedication to pushing updates, fixing bugs, and adding features to its kits,” IronNet said. 

                          Based on its research, IronNet said that Robin Banks appears to be primarily focused on selling phishing kits to basic users motivated solely by profit. “Cyber criminals using the Robin Banks kit often post the monetary data of their victims on Telegram and other various websites, listing the hacked account balances of various victims,” IronNet said. 

                          While the report doesn’t reveal who’s behind Robin Banks nor indicate where they may be located, IronNet said their investigation has identified potential suspects. IronNet was also able to estimate how much money Robin Banks’ users have gained illicit access to via the platform: more than $500,000, a number it said is rising daily.

                          Expect Robin Banks to react to its publicity, too, IronNet said: “Given the criminal operator’s clear dedication to managing and improving the platform, we suspect the threat actor behind Robin Banks to change tactics or toolings as a result of this report.”

                          North Korean malware steals emails as you read them

                          A well-established North Korean cyber-gang known as SharpTongue has adopted a heretofore undocumented malware family able to steal email and attachments while victims read them.

                          The new malware, named SHARPEXT by researchers at Volexity who apparently discovered it, exists as an extension for Chromium-based Microsoft Edge, Chrome, and Whale, a web browser that is little used outside South Korea. 

                          Unlike previous SharpTongue campaigns, SHARPEXT doesn’t attempt to steal any credentials. “Rather, the malware directly inspects and exfiltrates data from a victim’s webmail account as they browse it,” Volexity said. Gmail and AOL webmail are the only two services targeted by SHARPEXT.

                          SHARPEXT is the first malicious browser extension that Volexity has observed being installed as part of the post-exploitation phase of an attack. Installing the extension is a manual process, carried out by miscreants on a Windows PC once it’s been compromised.

                          “By stealing email data in the context of a user’s already-logged-in session, the attack is hidden from the email provider, making detection very challenging. Similarly, the way in which the extension works means suspicious activity would not be logged in a user’s email ‘account activity’ status page, were they to review it,” Volexity said. 

                          SharpTongue has been deploying SHARPEXT for over a year, Volexity said. To help combat this malware, Volexity has provided links to YARA rules and IOCs in its report. The researchers also recommend enabling and analyzing the results of PowerShell ScriptBlock logging, as PowerShell is used in the SHARPEXT installation process, and regularly reviewing installed browser extensions for ones loaded from outside the Chrome Web Store. 

                          No More Ransom celebrates 6 years and 1.5m decryptions

                          No More Ransom, a joint initiative between law enforcement agencies and cybersecurity firms that distributes free ransomware decryption software, recently celebrated six years in operation, and claims that in that time it has liberated more than 1.5 million ransomware victims.

                          Founded in 2016, No More Ransom started with four partners – The Dutch Police, Europol, Kaspersky, and McAfee – and has since grown to 188 partners across law enforcement, cybersecurity and other industries. 

                          One hundred and thirty-six tools covering 165 ransomware families are available for download at NMR, and they’ve been collectively downloaded more than 10 million times, the project claims. 

                          Ransomware, which infects systems, encrypts files, often exfiltrates documents, and demands payment for decryption, is a serious problem that only continues to grow. A SonicWall report from earlier this year found a 105 percent rise in ransomware incidents in 2021 and a threefold increase from 2019. Ransomware attacks against government entities have grown even faster, with SonicWall seeing a 1,885 percent rise in such attacks over the same period. 

                          Other sectors leading in malware attacks include healthcare, which saw a 755 percent increase, a 152 percent rise in education, and a 21 percent increase in attacks against retail organizations, SonicWall said. 

                          Bitdefender, a member of No More Ransom, said it is one of the top five contributors of decryptors to the project. According to its own research, its decryptors have saved ransomware victims nearly $1 billion in payments. 

                          “The No More Ransom initiative is one of the best examples of how private and public sectors can partner together for the betterment of everyone from individuals to large corporations. Bitdefender is proud to play a part in this ongoing initiative,” the company said. 

                          Ransomware is often delivered via phishing attacks, and often targets known vulnerabilities. In an ideal world that would mean that most organizations are protected by regularly applied patches and properly trained users, but we’re not in an ideal world. 

                          Hopefully you won’t need No More Ransom’s services anytime soon, but it’s there, and active, if you do. ®

                          ">

                          In brief Canadian fast food chain Tim Hortons is settling multiple data privacy class-action lawsuits against it by offering something it knows it’s good for: a donut and coffee.

                          The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) said Friday that Timmies’ agreement still requires approval from the courts, but if given the go ahead, Tim Hortons mobile app users affected by the chain’s improper data collection will “receive a free hot beverage and baked good.”

                          Tim Hortons will also have to permanently delete any geolocation data its apps improperly collected, and must instruct third party providers who had access to the data to do the same. 

                          Between May 2019 and August 2020, Tim Hortons’ mobile apps collected geolocation data from users without their knowledge or consent, a Canadian government investigation discovered.

                          According to that probe, Tim Hortons updated its apps to specifically add location tracking technology managed by a US company called Radar. That biz collected information from devices every few minutes to infer customers’ home and work locations and see if they were buying donuts elsewhere. 

                          The app continued to gather data even when it was in the background and only stopped if the app was quit, the investigation found. 

                          Tim Hortons said it never used the geolocation data it gathered to target ads, and permanently removed Radar’s code from its apps in September 2020. “The very limited use of this data was on an aggregated, de-identified basis to study trends in our business – and the results did not contain personal information from any guests,” Tim Hortons said in June when lawsuits started landing against it.

                          By Canadian pricing, affected Tim Hortons customers can expect a class-action settlement to pay out approximately C$2.88 ($2.25) in free food and beverages, which could very well be more than class members could expect to get in cash.

                          Kaspersky has detailed UEFI firmware-level malware dubbed CosmicStrand. This rootkit hides in firmware images of Gigabyte or ASUS motherboards, and has been seen in private individuals’ systems in China, Vietnam, Iran, and Russia. When Windows boots on an infected machine, CosmicStrand alters the kernel, allowing it to silently gain control of the computer and its applications, and communicate with a remote command-and-control server.

                          Cyber-scum agree: Container files are the new macros

                          While Microsoft is battling to stem the abuse of Office macros, cybercriminals are now turning to crafting malicious container files to infect victims with malware. And by container files, we mean things like disc images and archives, not Docker containers and the like.

                          According to research by Proofpoint, the use of Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) and XL4 macros to launch attacks against Microsoft Office users has dropped by 66 percent since October 2021, when Microsoft announced plans to block macros in downloaded Office files, Proofpoint said. 

                          “From October 2021 through June 2022, threat actors have pivoted away from macro-enabled documents attached directly to messages to deliver malware, and have increasingly used container files such as ISO and RAR attachments and Windows Shortcut (LNK) files,” Proofpoint said. 

                          Over the same time period Proofpoint tracked the decline in macro attacks, it said that container file attacks rose by 175 percent. “More than half of the 15 tracked threat actors that used ISO files in this time began using them in campaigns after January 2022,” Proofpoint said. Attacks involving LNK files have risen, too.

                          Along with a spike in attackers emailing malicious container files, Proofpoint said it also noticed a slight increase in the use of HTML attachments to transmit malware. While the number of HTML attachment attacks more than doubled in the period Proofpoint examined for its report, overall numbers remain low, it said. 

                          Microsoft began blocking internet-sourced Office macros earlier this year, though the change was temporarily rolled back in early July due to usability complaints. As of July 22, macro blocking has been re-enabled.

                          Proofpoint believes container files are likely to become the new standard for launching email attacks, so get ready to start blocking those, if you’re not already.

                          “Proofpoint researchers assess with high confidence this is one of the largest email threat landscape shifts in recent history,” the outfit said. 

                          Robin Banks: Easier than ever

                          A new phishing-as-a-service platform has emerged, and its purpose is right in its name: Robin Banks.

                          First spotted by researchers at IronNet, Robin Banks gained additional attention when the security biz found it to be behind a large-scale phishing campaign targeting Citibank customers and also trying to steal Microsoft account credentials. 

                          Robin Banks sells ready-made phishing kits focused on stealing financial account information from victims, hosts all the necessary infrastructure to run attacks for its customers, and has customization features so users can build their own phishing kits. 

                          In order to access the platform, crooks have to pay $50 a month for a single phishing page, or $200 a month for a broader package.

                          Robin Banks primarily targets US financial institutions, and has templates for Bank of America, Capital One, Citibank, and more. It also offers templates for Lloyds Bank and Australia’s Commonwealth Bank. Netflix, Microsoft, and Google account templates are also available.

                          A June campaign that tipped IronNet researchers off to Robin Banks’ level of activity was reportedly “very successful,” with numerous victims having their account information sold on the dark web or Telegram, the researchers said. The researchers believe the campaign is still expanding. 

                          IronNet said that Robin Banks isn’t particularly sophisticated, but stands out because it offers 24/7 support and has a “distinct dedication to pushing updates, fixing bugs, and adding features to its kits,” IronNet said. 

                          Based on its research, IronNet said that Robin Banks appears to be primarily focused on selling phishing kits to basic users motivated solely by profit. “Cyber criminals using the Robin Banks kit often post the monetary data of their victims on Telegram and other various websites, listing the hacked account balances of various victims,” IronNet said. 

                          While the report doesn’t reveal who’s behind Robin Banks nor indicate where they may be located, IronNet said their investigation has identified potential suspects. IronNet was also able to estimate how much money Robin Banks’ users have gained illicit access to via the platform: more than $500,000, a number it said is rising daily.

                          Expect Robin Banks to react to its publicity, too, IronNet said: “Given the criminal operator’s clear dedication to managing and improving the platform, we suspect the threat actor behind Robin Banks to change tactics or toolings as a result of this report.”

                          North Korean malware steals emails as you read them

                          A well-established North Korean cyber-gang known as SharpTongue has adopted a heretofore undocumented malware family able to steal email and attachments while victims read them.

                          The new malware, named SHARPEXT by researchers at Volexity who apparently discovered it, exists as an extension for Chromium-based Microsoft Edge, Chrome, and Whale, a web browser that is little used outside South Korea. 

                          Unlike previous SharpTongue campaigns, SHARPEXT doesn’t attempt to steal any credentials. “Rather, the malware directly inspects and exfiltrates data from a victim’s webmail account as they browse it,” Volexity said. Gmail and AOL webmail are the only two services targeted by SHARPEXT.

                          SHARPEXT is the first malicious browser extension that Volexity has observed being installed as part of the post-exploitation phase of an attack. Installing the extension is a manual process, carried out by miscreants on a Windows PC once it’s been compromised.

                          “By stealing email data in the context of a user’s already-logged-in session, the attack is hidden from the email provider, making detection very challenging. Similarly, the way in which the extension works means suspicious activity would not be logged in a user’s email ‘account activity’ status page, were they to review it,” Volexity said. 

                          SharpTongue has been deploying SHARPEXT for over a year, Volexity said. To help combat this malware, Volexity has provided links to YARA rules and IOCs in its report. The researchers also recommend enabling and analyzing the results of PowerShell ScriptBlock logging, as PowerShell is used in the SHARPEXT installation process, and regularly reviewing installed browser extensions for ones loaded from outside the Chrome Web Store. 

                          No More Ransom celebrates 6 years and 1.5m decryptions

                          No More Ransom, a joint initiative between law enforcement agencies and cybersecurity firms that distributes free ransomware decryption software, recently celebrated six years in operation, and claims that in that time it has liberated more than 1.5 million ransomware victims.

                          Founded in 2016, No More Ransom started with four partners – The Dutch Police, Europol, Kaspersky, and McAfee – and has since grown to 188 partners across law enforcement, cybersecurity and other industries. 

                          One hundred and thirty-six tools covering 165 ransomware families are available for download at NMR, and they’ve been collectively downloaded more than 10 million times, the project claims. 

                          Ransomware, which infects systems, encrypts files, often exfiltrates documents, and demands payment for decryption, is a serious problem that only continues to grow. A SonicWall report from earlier this year found a 105 percent rise in ransomware incidents in 2021 and a threefold increase from 2019. Ransomware attacks against government entities have grown even faster, with SonicWall seeing a 1,885 percent rise in such attacks over the same period. 

                          Other sectors leading in malware attacks include healthcare, which saw a 755 percent increase, a 152 percent rise in education, and a 21 percent increase in attacks against retail organizations, SonicWall said. 

                          Bitdefender, a member of No More Ransom, said it is one of the top five contributors of decryptors to the project. According to its own research, its decryptors have saved ransomware victims nearly $1 billion in payments. 

                          “The No More Ransom initiative is one of the best examples of how private and public sectors can partner together for the betterment of everyone from individuals to large corporations. Bitdefender is proud to play a part in this ongoing initiative,” the company said. 

                          Ransomware is often delivered via phishing attacks, and often targets known vulnerabilities. In an ideal world that would mean that most organizations are protected by regularly applied patches and properly trained users, but we’re not in an ideal world. 

                          Hopefully you won’t need No More Ransom’s services anytime soon, but it’s there, and active, if you do. ®

                          ">

                          In brief Canadian fast food chain Tim Hortons is settling multiple data privacy class-action lawsuits against it by offering something it knows it’s good for: a donut and coffee.

                          The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) said Friday that Timmies’ agreement still requires approval from the courts, but if given the go ahead, Tim Hortons mobile app users affected by the chain’s improper data collection will “receive a free hot beverage and baked good.”

                          Tim Hortons will also have to permanently delete any geolocation data its apps improperly collected, and must instruct third party providers who had access to the data to do the same. 

                          Between May 2019 and August 2020, Tim Hortons’ mobile apps collected geolocation data from users without their knowledge or consent, a Canadian government investigation discovered.

                          According to that probe, Tim Hortons updated its apps to specifically add location tracking technology managed by a US company called Radar. That biz collected information from devices every few minutes to infer customers’ home and work locations and see if they were buying donuts elsewhere. 

                          The app continued to gather data even when it was in the background and only stopped if the app was quit, the investigation found. 

                          Tim Hortons said it never used the geolocation data it gathered to target ads, and permanently removed Radar’s code from its apps in September 2020. “The very limited use of this data was on an aggregated, de-identified basis to study trends in our business – and the results did not contain personal information from any guests,” Tim Hortons said in June when lawsuits started landing against it.

                          By Canadian pricing, affected Tim Hortons customers can expect a class-action settlement to pay out approximately C$2.88 ($2.25) in free food and beverages, which could very well be more than class members could expect to get in cash.

                          Kaspersky has detailed UEFI firmware-level malware dubbed CosmicStrand. This rootkit hides in firmware images of Gigabyte or ASUS motherboards, and has been seen in private individuals’ systems in China, Vietnam, Iran, and Russia. When Windows boots on an infected machine, CosmicStrand alters the kernel, allowing it to silently gain control of the computer and its applications, and communicate with a remote command-and-control server.

                          Cyber-scum agree: Container files are the new macros

                          While Microsoft is battling to stem the abuse of Office macros, cybercriminals are now turning to crafting malicious container files to infect victims with malware. And by container files, we mean things like disc images and archives, not Docker containers and the like.

                          According to research by Proofpoint, the use of Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) and XL4 macros to launch attacks against Microsoft Office users has dropped by 66 percent since October 2021, when Microsoft announced plans to block macros in downloaded Office files, Proofpoint said. 

                          “From October 2021 through June 2022, threat actors have pivoted away from macro-enabled documents attached directly to messages to deliver malware, and have increasingly used container files such as ISO and RAR attachments and Windows Shortcut (LNK) files,” Proofpoint said. 

                          Over the same time period Proofpoint tracked the decline in macro attacks, it said that container file attacks rose by 175 percent. “More than half of the 15 tracked threat actors that used ISO files in this time began using them in campaigns after January 2022,” Proofpoint said. Attacks involving LNK files have risen, too.

                          Along with a spike in attackers emailing malicious container files, Proofpoint said it also noticed a slight increase in the use of HTML attachments to transmit malware. While the number of HTML attachment attacks more than doubled in the period Proofpoint examined for its report, overall numbers remain low, it said. 

                          Microsoft began blocking internet-sourced Office macros earlier this year, though the change was temporarily rolled back in early July due to usability complaints. As of July 22, macro blocking has been re-enabled.

                          Proofpoint believes container files are likely to become the new standard for launching email attacks, so get ready to start blocking those, if you’re not already.

                          “Proofpoint researchers assess with high confidence this is one of the largest email threat landscape shifts in recent history,” the outfit said. 

                          Robin Banks: Easier than ever

                          A new phishing-as-a-service platform has emerged, and its purpose is right in its name: Robin Banks.

                          First spotted by researchers at IronNet, Robin Banks gained additional attention when the security biz found it to be behind a large-scale phishing campaign targeting Citibank customers and also trying to steal Microsoft account credentials. 

                          Robin Banks sells ready-made phishing kits focused on stealing financial account information from victims, hosts all the necessary infrastructure to run attacks for its customers, and has customization features so users can build their own phishing kits. 

                          In order to access the platform, crooks have to pay $50 a month for a single phishing page, or $200 a month for a broader package.

                          Robin Banks primarily targets US financial institutions, and has templates for Bank of America, Capital One, Citibank, and more. It also offers templates for Lloyds Bank and Australia’s Commonwealth Bank. Netflix, Microsoft, and Google account templates are also available.

                          A June campaign that tipped IronNet researchers off to Robin Banks’ level of activity was reportedly “very successful,” with numerous victims having their account information sold on the dark web or Telegram, the researchers said. The researchers believe the campaign is still expanding. 

                          IronNet said that Robin Banks isn’t particularly sophisticated, but stands out because it offers 24/7 support and has a “distinct dedication to pushing updates, fixing bugs, and adding features to its kits,” IronNet said. 

                          Based on its research, IronNet said that Robin Banks appears to be primarily focused on selling phishing kits to basic users motivated solely by profit. “Cyber criminals using the Robin Banks kit often post the monetary data of their victims on Telegram and other various websites, listing the hacked account balances of various victims,” IronNet said. 

                          While the report doesn’t reveal who’s behind Robin Banks nor indicate where they may be located, IronNet said their investigation has identified potential suspects. IronNet was also able to estimate how much money Robin Banks’ users have gained illicit access to via the platform: more than $500,000, a number it said is rising daily.

                          Expect Robin Banks to react to its publicity, too, IronNet said: “Given the criminal operator’s clear dedication to managing and improving the platform, we suspect the threat actor behind Robin Banks to change tactics or toolings as a result of this report.”

                          North Korean malware steals emails as you read them

                          A well-established North Korean cyber-gang known as SharpTongue has adopted a heretofore undocumented malware family able to steal email and attachments while victims read them.

                          The new malware, named SHARPEXT by researchers at Volexity who apparently discovered it, exists as an extension for Chromium-based Microsoft Edge, Chrome, and Whale, a web browser that is little used outside South Korea. 

                          Unlike previous SharpTongue campaigns, SHARPEXT doesn’t attempt to steal any credentials. “Rather, the malware directly inspects and exfiltrates data from a victim’s webmail account as they browse it,” Volexity said. Gmail and AOL webmail are the only two services targeted by SHARPEXT.

                          SHARPEXT is the first malicious browser extension that Volexity has observed being installed as part of the post-exploitation phase of an attack. Installing the extension is a manual process, carried out by miscreants on a Windows PC once it’s been compromised.

                          “By stealing email data in the context of a user’s already-logged-in session, the attack is hidden from the email provider, making detection very challenging. Similarly, the way in which the extension works means suspicious activity would not be logged in a user’s email ‘account activity’ status page, were they to review it,” Volexity said. 

                          SharpTongue has been deploying SHARPEXT for over a year, Volexity said. To help combat this malware, Volexity has provided links to YARA rules and IOCs in its report. The researchers also recommend enabling and analyzing the results of PowerShell ScriptBlock logging, as PowerShell is used in the SHARPEXT installation process, and regularly reviewing installed browser extensions for ones loaded from outside the Chrome Web Store. 

                          No More Ransom celebrates 6 years and 1.5m decryptions

                          No More Ransom, a joint initiative between law enforcement agencies and cybersecurity firms that distributes free ransomware decryption software, recently celebrated six years in operation, and claims that in that time it has liberated more than 1.5 million ransomware victims.

                          Founded in 2016, No More Ransom started with four partners – The Dutch Police, Europol, Kaspersky, and McAfee – and has since grown to 188 partners across law enforcement, cybersecurity and other industries. 

                          One hundred and thirty-six tools covering 165 ransomware families are available for download at NMR, and they’ve been collectively downloaded more than 10 million times, the project claims. 

                          Ransomware, which infects systems, encrypts files, often exfiltrates documents, and demands payment for decryption, is a serious problem that only continues to grow. A SonicWall report from earlier this year found a 105 percent rise in ransomware incidents in 2021 and a threefold increase from 2019. Ransomware attacks against government entities have grown even faster, with SonicWall seeing a 1,885 percent rise in such attacks over the same period. 

                          Other sectors leading in malware attacks include healthcare, which saw a 755 percent increase, a 152 percent rise in education, and a 21 percent increase in attacks against retail organizations, SonicWall said. 

                          Bitdefender, a member of No More Ransom, said it is one of the top five contributors of decryptors to the project. According to its own research, its decryptors have saved ransomware victims nearly $1 billion in payments. 

                          “The No More Ransom initiative is one of the best examples of how private and public sectors can partner together for the betterment of everyone from individuals to large corporations. Bitdefender is proud to play a part in this ongoing initiative,” the company said. 

                          Ransomware is often delivered via phishing attacks, and often targets known vulnerabilities. In an ideal world that would mean that most organizations are protected by regularly applied patches and properly trained users, but we’re not in an ideal world. 

                          Hopefully you won’t need No More Ransom’s services anytime soon, but it’s there, and active, if you do. ®

                          Tags: Hortonsoffer
                          ">
                          Ferhan Rana

                          Ferhan Rana

                          Related Posts

                          Ferrari In A Spin As Crims Steal A Car-Load Of Customer Data
                          Technology

                          Ferrari in a spin as crims steal a car-load of customer data

                          by Ferhan Rana
                          March 21, 2023
                          Stanford Sends ‘Hallucinating’ Alpaca Ai Model Out To Pasture Over Safety, Cost
                          Technology

                          Stanford sends ‘hallucinating’ Alpaca AI model out to pasture over safety, cost

                          by Ferhan Rana
                          March 21, 2023
                          Bianlian Ransomware Crew Goes 100% Extortion After Free Decryptor Lands
                          Technology

                          BianLian ransomware crew goes 100% extortion after free decryptor lands

                          by Ferhan Rana
                          March 20, 2023
                          Microsoft Pushes Out Powershell Scripts To Fix Bitlocker Bypass
                          Technology

                          Microsoft pushes out PowerShell scripts to fix BitLocker bypass

                          by Ferhan Rana
                          March 20, 2023
                          Willem Dafoe Would Return To The Spider-Verse Again
                          Technology

                          Willem Dafoe Would Return to the Spider-Verse Again

                          by Ferhan Rana
                          March 19, 2023

                          Premium Content

                          On ‘Bitcoin Beach’ Travelers And Homeowners Hail El Salvador’S Adoption Of Cryptocurrency

                          On ‘Bitcoin Coastline’ vacationers as well as house owners hail El Salvador’s fostering of cryptocurrency

                          September 8, 2021
                          Raptors Keep Rolling Vs. Pelicans As Poeltl Plays ‘Humongous’ Once Again

                          Raptors keep rolling vs. Pelicans as Poeltl plays ‘humongous’ once again

                          March 3, 2023
                          The U.s Facilities Costs And Nigeria’S Growing Cryptocurrency Interest

                          The U.S Facilities Prices as well as Nigeria’s expanding cryptocurrency passion

                          August 23, 2021

                          Browse by Category

                          • Business
                          • Crypto
                          • Entertainment
                          • Fashion
                          • Health
                          • Lifestyle
                          • Real Estate
                          • Sports
                          • Technology
                          • Travel
                          • Uncategorized
                          • World

                          Browse by Tags

                          Andrew announces Apple Barcelona Charles Covid- Cristiano director Elizabeth Europe Exclusive First Galaxy Google Hamilton Harry health Intel James Launch launches Lewis Manchester Markle Meghan Microsoft Middleton movies people Prince Princess Queen REPORT reveals Review Royal Samsung Shares Takes Twitter wants WATCH William World Years
                          TrivDaily

                          Get the latest World news and analysis, breaking news, features and special reports from World. Also watch videos from across the Europian continent.

                          Learn more

                          Categories

                          • Business
                          • Crypto
                          • Entertainment
                          • Fashion
                          • Health
                          • Lifestyle
                          • Real Estate
                          • Sports
                          • Technology
                          • Travel
                          • Uncategorized
                          • World

                          Browse by Tag

                          Business (877) Crypto (874) Entertainment (1273) Fashion (3) Health (535) Lifestyle (1182) Real Estate (40) Sports (1555) Technology (1649) Travel (816) Uncategorized (9) World (23)

                          Recent Posts

                          • Tom Izzo Delivers Emotional Interview After MSU’s Win Over Marquette
                          • Drew Timme Drops F-Bomb in Interview After Gonzaga Beats TCU
                          • Princess Kate spotted in fun new photo from James Middleton’s wedding

                          © 2021 TrivDaily - Developed by ADSA Solutions.

                          • Login
                          • Sign Up
                          • Cart
                          No Result
                          View All Result
                          • Home
                          • Business News
                          • Entertainment News
                          • Lifestyle News
                          • Health News
                          • Tech News
                          • Real Estate News
                          • World News

                          © 2021 TrivDaily - Developed by ADSA Solutions.

                          Welcome Back!

                          Login to your account below

                          Forgotten Password? Sign Up

                          Create New Account!

                          Fill the forms bellow to register

                          All fields are required. Log In

                          Retrieve your password

                          Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

                          Log In

                          Add New Playlist

                          Are you sure want to unlock this post?
                          Unlock left : 0
                          Are you sure want to cancel subscription?