n the latter half of 2024, the Russian IT industry, alongside a number of entities in other countries, experienced a notable cyberattack. The attackers employed a range of malicious techniques to trick security systems and remain undetected.
To bypass detection, they delivered information about their payload via profiles on both Russian and international social media platforms, as well as other popular sites supporting user-generated content. The samples Kaspersky security researchres analyzed communicated with GitHub, Microsoft Learn Challenge, Quora, and Russian-language social networks. The attackers thus aimed to conceal their activities and establish a complex execution chain for the long-known and widely used Cobalt Strike Beacon.
Read more…
Source: Kaspersky
Sign up for the Cyber Security Review Newsletter
The latest cyber security news and insights delivered right to your inbox
Related:
- Anthropic confirms it leaked 512,000 lines of Claude Code source code — spilling some of its biggest secrets
April 1, 2026
An Anthropic employee accidentally leaked the source code for one of the most popular Artificial Intelligence (AI) assistants out there – Claude Code. Security researcher Chaofan Shou posted on X, saying “Claude Code source code has been leaked via a map file in their npm registry!” The tweet itself was viewed more than 30 million times ...
- Iran targets M365 accounts with password-spraying attacks
March 31, 2026
Suspected Iran-linked threat actors are conducting password-spraying attacks against hundreds of organizations, primarily Middle Eastern municipalities, in campaigns that security researchers believe may have been aimed at supporting bomb-damage assessment following missile strikes. Tel Aviv-based Check Point Research on Tuesday said that the attackers used multiple source IP addresses to target numerous Microsoft 365 accounts, affecting ...
- North Korea-Nexus Threat Actor Compromises Widely Used Axios NPM Package in Supply Chain Attack
March 31, 2026
Google Threat Intelligence Group (GTIG) is tracking an active software supply chain attack targeting the popular Node Package Manager (NPM) package “axios.” Between March 31, 2026, 00:21 and 03:20 UTC, an attacker introduced a malicious dependency named “plain-crypto-js” into axios NPM releases versions 1.14.1 and 0.30.4. Axios is the most popular JavaScript library used to simplify ...
- Weaponizing the Protectors: TeamPCP’s Multi-Stage Supply Chain Attack on Security Infrastructure
March 31, 2026
Between late February and March 2026, threat group TeamPCP conducted a highly calculated, escalating sequence of supply chain threats. It systematically compromised widely trusted open-source security tools, including the vulnerability scanners Trivy and KICS and the popular AI gateway LiteLLM. The affected software also includes the official Python SDK of Telnyx. These ongoing supply chain attacks ...
- GitHub developers targeted by fake VS Code alerts spreading malware
March 30, 2026
Cybercriminals are tricking GitHub into sending out fraudulent email notifications, luring software developers into downloading malware, experts have warned. Security researchers Socket, who said they observed a large-scale, coordinated spam campaign targeting developers on various projects. GitHub has a section called “Discussions”, which is essentially a forum for discussing various projects. When a developer participates in, ...
- Beyond Compliance: How Financial Institutions Can Meet New Fraud-Sharing Mandates While Respecting Privacy
March 30, 2026
Authorized Push Payment (APP) fraud is one of the most damaging forms of digital deception. The pattern repeats itself thousands of times each year: an email from the bank’s security team warning of suspicious activity. A phone call that follows immediately. The caller ID matches. The “fraud prevention officer” knows details about recent transactions. Within minutes, ...
