Alisa Stern, Shutterstock / Inside Creative House – In-House Art There’s a lot of hype around AI, and just as much fear. But anxiety over pie-in-the-sky scenarios involving sentient robots and supe…
Interlock ransomware surges: healthcare and critical sectors hit
Interlock ransomware gangs are ramping up attacks, using sneaky drive-by downloads and tricking users to steal and lock data, forcing victims to pay through the dark web. The threat hits hospitals and infrastructure hard, making it urgent for everyone to tighten security now.
Incoming VA announcement! This casting round had such an extremely talented batch of VAs, everyone should be proud of what they submitted! Everyone, please join me in welcoming the following actors to the #CyberThreat cast!!
Google warns cryptocurrency miners are hacking cloud accounts, suggests ways to counter cyber threat
Google warns cryptocurrency miners are hacking cloud accounts, suggests ways to counter cyber threat
Global search engine giant Google has revealed that hackers are increasingly targeting compromised cloud accounts to mine cryptocurrency. The revelation is part of a new report from Google’s in-house cybersecurity action team.
Google’s cybersecurity team, which spots cyber threats and gives advice on how to tackle them, has come out with a report called “threat horizon” that sheds light on…
New Wallpaper
Great wallpaper showing a space station with a cool view of earth and the moon (got to love the hologram and screens on the sides)
Actually, I was looking for a Cybermap wallpaper but couldn’t find one with good quality
I was thinking in using the cyberthreat real-time map by Kaspersky but when converting it into a image format it doesn’t show with enough quality
(Screenshot down below)
Cyberattacks have cut power to a major city and delayed the delivery of medicine. Find out how experts combat such attacks and how to protect yourself.
“Grant? How can you hear me?” The voice came through Grant Thompson’s iPhone. The 14-year-old had FaceTimed his friend Nathan to ask if he wanted to play the game Fortnite. But Nathan didn’t answer right away. So Grant swiped to add another friend to a group FaceTime call. All of a sudden, he could hear Nathan and Nathan could hear him. But Nathan had never tapped to answer the call. Both of their phones showed the call still ringing.
This happened on January 19, 2019. Grant, a high school freshman in Arizona, could have shrugged off the strange glitch and spent the evening playing Fortnite. But that’s not what he did. He told Nathan to hang up and called him again. He wanted to see if he could get the call to connect again without Nathan answering. “We tested it for like half an hour,” Grant says. “It worked every single time.”
As a freshman in high school, Grant Thompson discovered a major bug in his iPhone’s software. He says everyone should “pay attention to what’s going on in their phones.” More bugs likely exist that no one has found yet.
CREDIT: M. Thompson
Feeling shocked and concerned, Grant went to find his mom, Michele Thompson, and tell her what had happened. She decided to test the problem herself. She asked Grant to try to FaceTime her from a different room. When he did, she didn’t answer. Meanwhile, Grant swiped to add his sister to the call. He was too far away to hear his mom’s voice normally. But through his phone, he heard her quietly singing the ABCs.
Grant and his family had discovered a major mistake, also called a bug, in the iPhone’s software. This bug let a person listen to someone else without their permission or knowledge.
Grant’s mom is a lawyer at Udall Law Firm in Tucson, Ariz. She regularly handles privacy issues in her practice, so she knew the bug was a big deal. She reported it to Apple, the maker of the iPhone. “Honestly, I thought it was going to be fixed the next day,” she says. But it wasn’t. For almost two weeks, she tried to get the attention of the right people at Apple.
Meanwhile, others discovered this bug existed. Soon, the cyberbug hit the news and Apple shut down group FaceTime. The bug earned the clever nickname “Face palm.”
On February 7, the company released a software update that fixed the problem. Apple also rewarded Grant. He had been the first person to report the bug. “They gave a gift towards my education,” he says.
The experience taught him to be careful with technology. He also learned that anyone can discover a major security problem. “I stumbled upon this by accident,” he says. “There are probably more glitches like this out there that people haven’t found yet.”
Russian FSB cyber actors are infiltrating unpatched routers and networking devices worldwide, gathering sensitive configuration data and probing industrial systems, a threat detected by the FBI and analysed by Cisco Talos.