Reeling in DarkGate Malware Attacks from the Beach


Last year, the number of malware attacks worldwide reached 6.08 billion. That’s a 10% increase compared with 2022. Why are cybercriminals developing so much malware? Because it is a vital tool to help them infiltrate businesses, networks or specific computers to steal or destroy sensitive data. or destroy sensitive data.

There are many types of malware infections. Here are just three examples – RYUK (ransomware), Astaroth (fileless malware), DarkGate (multifunctional malware). DarkGate is a notable example. It’s a sophisticated and adaptive piece of malware that’s designed to perform various malicious activities. This includes data theft, unauthorized access and system compromise.

Read more…
Source: Proofpoint


Sign up for our Newsletter


Related:

  • US federal agency compromised in suspected APT attack

    December 17, 2021

    A sophisticated threat actor has gained access and has backdoored the internal network of a US federal government agency. The security firm did not name the agency in its report, but The Record understands that the target of the attack was the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF). According to its website, the USCIRF is ...

  • Meta bans ‘cyber-mercenaries’ that targeted 50,000 people

    December 17, 2021

    Meta, Facebook’s parent company, has banned several “cyber-mercenary” groups thought to have been offering surveillance services aimed at activists, dissidents and journalists worldwide. The social media giant said on Thursday it had begun warning about 50,000 people it believed may have come under scrutiny across more than 100 nations. The Facebook parent said it deleted accounts tied ...

  • A deep dive into an NSO zero-click iMessage exploit: Remote Code Execution

    December 16, 2021

    Google Project Zero researchers want to thank Citizen Lab for sharing a sample of the FORCEDENTRY exploit with them, and Apple’s Security Engineering and Architecture (SEAR) group for collaborating with Google Project Zero on the technical analysis. The editorial opinions reflected below are solely Project Zero’s and do not necessarily reflect those of the organizations ...

  • PseudoManuscrypt: a mass-scale spyware attack campaign

    December 16, 2021

    In June 2021, Kaspersky ICS CERT experts identified malware whose loader has some similarities to the Manuscrypt malware, which is part of the Lazarus APT group’s arsenal. In 2020, the group used Manuscrypt in attacks on defense enterprises in different countries. These attacks are described in the report “Lazarus targets defense industry with ThreatNeedle“. Curiously, the ...

  • Hive ransomware enters big league with hundreds breached in four months

    December 16, 2021

    The Hive ransomware gang is more active and aggressive than its leak site shows, with affiliates attacking an average of three companies every day since the operation became known in late June. Security researchers gleaning information straight from Hive’s administrator panel found that affiliates had breached more than 350 organizations over four months. The gang’s data leak ...

  • Lenovo laptops vulnerable to bug allowing admin privileges

    December 16, 2021

    Lenovo laptops, including ThinkPad and Yoga models, are vulnerable to a privilege elevation bug in the ImControllerService service allowing attackers to execute commands with admin privileges. The flaws are tracked as CVE-2021-3922 and CVE-2021-3969 and affect the ImControllerService component of all Lenovo System Interface Foundation versions below 1.1.20.3. When viewing the Windows services screen, this service ...