Cybercriminals have breached insurance giant Aflac, potentially stealing Social Security numbers, insurance claims and health information, the company said Friday, the latest in a spree of hacks against the insurance industry.
With billions of dollars in annual revenue and tens of millions of customers, Aflac is the biggest victim yet in the ongoing digital assault on US insurance companies that has the industry on edge and the FBI and private cyber experts scrambling to contain the fallout. Erie Insurance and Philadelphia Insurance Companies have also reported hacks this month, which in those cases have caused widespread disruptions to IT systems used to serve customers. All three insurance-company hacks are consistent with the techniques of a young and rampant cybercrime group known as Scattered Spider, people familiar the investigation tell CNN.
Read more…
Source: CNN News
Sign up for our Newsletter
The latest news and insights delivered right to your inbox.
Related:
- Hackers steal and destroy millions from Iran’s largest crypto exchange
June 18, 2025
Iran’s largest crypto exchange, Nobitex, said Wednesday that it was hacked and funds have been drained from its hot wallet. In a statement on its website translated by TechCrunch, Nobitex said it detected unauthorized access to its infrastructure and hot wallet, in which the company stores a portion of its customers’ cryptocurrency. The company said it ...
- Innovative Tunnelling and Forensic Tool Abuse: IR Tales from the Field
June 17, 2025
Rapid7’s Incident Response (IR) team was engaged to investigate an incident involving an attempted Cobalt Strike execution. The investigation uncovered twists and turns with pre-ransomware activities, tunneling tools, and attackers taking a page out of the defender’s playbook. The attacker took careful steps to maintain access to the environment through persistence that mimicked normal user behavior. ...
- Exploring a New KimJongRAT Stealer Variant and Its PowerShell Implementation
June 17, 2025
This article provides a comprehensive analysis of two new variants of the KimJongRAT stealer. Palo Alto Unit 42 combine new research findings with existing knowledge to provide a comprehensive resource for understanding and combating these new KimJongRAT variants. The KimJongRAT stealer was first described in 2013 by the Malware.lu CERT. Palo Alto researchers documented another variant ...
- Major hack against car-sharing firm Zoomcar sees 8.4 million users at risk
June 17, 2025
Car sharing marketplace Zoomcar has suffered a cyberattack in which it lost sensitive information on millions of customers. In a new 8-K form filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the company said it was made aware of the attack on June 9, 2025, and a subsequent investigation determined the threat actors managed to steal, ...
- VMDetector-Based Loader Abuses Steganography to Deliver Infostealers
June 16, 2025
Recently, the SonicWall Capture Labs threat research team has identified various malware strains being distributed through a custom VMDetector Loader. This loader is typically delivered to the victim’s system via image files embedded with steganography. The primary payloads observed include popular malware families such as Remcos, VIPKeyLogger, AveMariaRAT, DCRAT, FormBook, and others. Attackers send an email ...
- Filch Stealer: A new infostealer leveraging old techniques
June 16, 2025
In recent weeks, Rapid7 has observed an increased volume of incidents involving domains generated by domain generation algorithms (DGAs). DGAs are a known technique leveraged by malware authors to quickly create a large number of domain names, which will point to command and control (C2) servers operated by the attackers. Observed domains shared multiple commonalities such ...

