In the 95th edition of Internet Security Week, we analyze banking trojans, reveal that 25 million Brazilians had their data compromised, receive a warning from the Brazilian government, and much more.
News
PowerPoint is used by criminals to spread malicious files.
A phishing campaign in South Korea is using malicious Microsoft PowerPoint files to spread the Agent Tesla malware, a threat aimed at stealing information.
By Dácio Castelo Branco on Canaltech
Large-scale phishing study shows who takes the bait most often.
A large-scale phishing study involving 14,733 participants in a 15-month experiment produced some surprising findings that contradict results from previous research that formed the basis for popular industry practices.
By Bill Toulas on Bleepingcomputer
Hackers steal millions from a Russian bank in seconds.
After three years of inactivity, the Russian hacker group known as MoneyTaker reappeared to steal a large sum of money from several bank customers by compromising an automated workstation operated by a client of the Bank of Russia.
In CISO Advisor
From Amavaldo to Zumanek: an analysis of 12 Latin American banking trojans.
Latin American banking trojans share many characteristics and behaviors, and these common links were addressed in a whitepaper produced by ESET.
In Welivesecurity
The new Spider-Man movie is being used for online scams!
In anticipation of seeing the film before its official release, internet users end up becoming victims of cyberattacks.
In Kaspersky Daily
Nearly 25 million Brazilians had their data breached.
24.19 million Brazilian users lost data during one or more data breaches this year.
In Digital Convergence
Credit card websites were hacked for months without being detected.
Hackers are preparing for the holiday season with credit card cloning attacks that go undetected for months as payment information is stolen from customers.
By Bill Toulas on Bleepingcomputer
Brazilian government warns about Log4j attacks involving cryptocurrency theft.
Aware of the risks of the Log4j vulnerability, the Incident Prevention, Treatment and Response Center (CTIR) issued a statement on Tuesday (14) warning about possible problems caused by the flaw, mainly related to cryptocurrency theft, and the need for users and companies to update their systems.
By Dácio Castelo Branco on Canaltech
With R$1,000, hacker buys 1 million identities.
If a cybercriminal invests R$ 1000 in a credential theft attack, they will be able to buy a database with 1 million bank account holder identities on the black market.
In CISO Advisor
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