Russian cybercrims phish their way into officials' Signal and WhatsApp accounts - Cyber Security Review
Menu

Cyber Security Review

News • Insights • Analysis

Primary Menu

Skip to content
  • About
    • Advanced Persistent Threat
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Critical Infrastructure Protection
      • Aviation
      • Banking and Finance
      • Defence and Aerospace
      • Education and Academia
      • Energy
      • Government
      • Healthcare
      • Industrial Security
      • Telecommunications
      • Transportation
      • Utilities
    • Cybercrime
      • DDoS
    • Malware
    • Network Security
  • News
    • News – June 2026
    • News – May 2026
    • News – April 2026
    • News – March 2026
    • News – February 2026
    • News – January 2026
    • News – December 2025
    • News – November 2025
    • News – October 2025
    • News – September 2025
    • NEWS ARCHIVE
  • Articles
  • Events
  • Editorial
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
Search

Russian cybercrims phish their way into officials’ Signal and WhatsApp accounts

Posted onMarch 9, 2026March 10, 2026AuthorCyber Security Review


Russian-linked hackers are trying to break into the Signal and WhatsApp accounts of government officials, journalists, and military personnel globally – not by cracking encryption, but by simply tricking people into handing over the keys.

That’s the warning issued Monday by the Netherlands’ intelligence and military security agencies, the AIVD and MIVD, which say a “large-scale” Russian cyber campaign is actively targeting Signal and WhatsApp accounts. The goal isn’t to defeat the apps’ end-to-end encryption, but to take over the accounts themselves and quietly read whatever conversations are inside.

Read more…
Source: The Register News


Sign up for the Cyber Security Review Newsletter
The latest cyber security news and insights delivered right to your inbox


Related:

  • DarkVishnya: Banks attacked through direct connection to local network

    December 6, 2018

    While novice attackers, imitating the protagonists of the U.S. drama Mr. Robot, leave USB flash drives lying around parking lots in the hope that an employee from the target company picks one up and plugs it in at the workplace, more experienced cybercriminals prefer not to rely on chance. In 2017-2018, Kaspersky Lab specialists were invited to research ...

  • IoT Botnets Behind 78% of Malware Network Events in 2018 According to Report

    December 6, 2018

    Internet of things (IoT) botnet activity during 2018 was behind roughly 78% of all network malware events detected by the NetGuard Endpoint Security solution deployed on more than 150 million devices according to a report by the Nokia Threat Intelligence Lab. The Nokia Threat Intelligence Report 2019 report was also performed using multiple malware sandboxes and honeypots, on both ...

  • ESET discovers 21 new Linux malware families

    December 6, 2018

    Although Linux is a much more secure operating system compared to the more widely used Windows, it is not impervious to misconfigurations and malware infections. Over the past decade, the number of malware families targeting Linux has grown, but the total number of threats is still orders of magnitude under the malware numbers reported attacking Windows systems. This smaller ...

  • Backdoor in Popular JavaScript Library Set to Steal Cryptocurrency

    November 27, 2018

    A JavaScript library that scores over two million downloads every week has been injected with malicious code for stealing coins from a cryptocurrency wallet. The affected package is Event-Stream, built to simplify working with Node.js streaming modules and it is available through the npmjs.com repository. Although the malicious code was discovered last week, researchers were able to determine ...

  • Mobile Rotexy Malware Touts Ransomware, Banking Trojan Functions

    November 26, 2018

    A mobile malware has accelerated its activity in 2018, launching more than 70k attacks in August through October. Mobile malware, dubbed Rotexy, has evolved from being spyware to now a dangerous banking trojan packing a host of new clever features. Researchers report 70,000 attacks between August and October with targets primarily based in Russia. In a technical brief released ...

  • Rowhammer attacks can now bypass ECC memory protections

    November 22, 2018

    Academics from the Vrije University in Amsterdam, Holland, have published a research paper today describing a new variation of the Rowhammer attack. For readers unfamiliar with the term, Rowhammer is the name of a class of exploits that takes advantage of a hardware design flaw in modern memory cards. By default, a memory card stores temporary data ...

  • <<
  • 1
  • ...
  • 953
  • 954
  • 955
  • 956
  • 957
  • 958
  • 959
  • 960
  • 961
  • 962
  • 963
  • ...
  • 982
  • >>

CategoriesNews March 2026TagsAccount Takeover, Cyber Attack, Cyber Espionage, Data Theft, Europe, Messaging Application, Privacy, Russia, Signal, Social Engineering, The Netherlands, Threat Intelligence, TTPs, WhatsApp

Post navigation

← Previous Previous post: Cisco warns of two more SD-WAN bugs under active attack
Next → Next post: Fake Claude Code install pages hit Windows and Mac users with infostealers

LATEST ARTICLES


THE STRATEGIC IMPORTANCE OF DIGITAL SOVEREIGNTY IN 2026
By Alexandre Grellier, CEO, Drooms
Cyber Security Review online – May 2026


A BEGINNER’S ROADMAP: HOW TO START YOUR AI SOC AGENT IMPLEMENTATION
By Kirsten Doyle
Cyber Security Review online – November 2025


THE PEOPLE BEHIND THE PIXELS: WHY CYBERSECURITY IN CRITICAL INDUSTRIES IS MORE HUMAN THAN EVER
Cyber Security Review online – July 2025


HOW TO MAXIMIZE EXCHANGE SERVER UPTIME? - SOME BEST PRACTICES
Cyber Security Review online – June 2025


KEY METRICS TO TRACK WHEN IMPLEMENTING AI IN YOUR SOC
By Josh Breaker-Rolfe
Cyber Security Review online – December 2024


ACHIEVING DATA SECURITY RESILIENCE WITH DSPM TOOLS
By Katrina Thompson
Cyber Security Review online – November 2024


CYBER SECURITY IN CRITICAL INDUSTRIES: CHALLENGES, SOLUTIONS, AND THE ROAD AHEAD
Cyber Security Review online – August 2024


HOW TO ENGAGE YOUR EMPLOYEES IN SECURITY AWARENESS TRAINING
Cyber Security Review online – April 2024


WHY IMMINENT SEC CYBER RULE CHANGES MEANS CYBER SECURITY LEADERSHIP MUST COME FROM THE VERY TOP
By Miguel Clarke, GRC and Cyber Security lead for Armor Defense
Cyber Security Review online – November 2023


WHAT COULD YOU DO IF YOU KNEW HOW EVERY PIECE OF DATA WAS BEING USED?
By Ross Moore, Cyber Security Support Analyst with Passageways
Cyber Security Review online – October 2023

A BRIEF HISTORY OF DATA LOSS PREVENTION
Cyber Security Review online –  July 2023


THE 5 ESSENTIAL CYBERSECURITY AWARENESS TRAINING TIPS FOR A MORE SECURE ENVIRONMENT
Cyber Security Review online –  June 2023


THE 8-STEP COMPREHENSIVE CHECKLIST FOR APPLICATION SECURITY IN 2023
Cyber Security Review online –  April 2023

THE NETWORK SECURITY CHALLENGE:
Improving Visibility to Defend Against Cyberthreats
By Kev Eley, Vice President Sales UK and Europe at LogRhythm

SWEDEN LAUNCHES EUROPE’S MOST ADVANCED HUB FOR AUTOMOTIVE CYBER SECURITY
Research Institute engages ethical hackers and the latest research in cyber technology to combat spiraling threats to connected vehicles  

Resources  |  Contact us  |  Advertise  |  User Login



Copyright © 2026 Cyber Security Review. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy
Catch Base by Catch Themes
Scroll Up
  • About
    • Advanced Persistent Threat
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Critical Infrastructure Protection
      • Aviation
      • Banking and Finance
      • Defence and Aerospace
      • Education and Academia
      • Energy
      • Government
      • Healthcare
      • Industrial Security
      • Telecommunications
      • Transportation
      • Utilities
    • Cybercrime
      • DDoS
    • Malware
    • Network Security
  • News
    • News – June 2026
    • News – May 2026
    • News – April 2026
    • News – March 2026
    • News – February 2026
    • News – January 2026
    • News – December 2025
    • News – November 2025
    • News – October 2025
    • News – September 2025
    • NEWS ARCHIVE
  • Articles
  • Events
  • Editorial
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise