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A week in security (September 18 - September 24)
Last week on Malwarebytes Labs: Emergency update! Apple patches three zero-days T-Mobile spills billing information to other customers Involved in a data breach? Heres what you need to know Steer clear of cryptocurrency recovery phrase scams DoppelPaymer ransomware group suspects identified The...
The LastPass Hack Somehow Gets Worse
Plus: The US Marshals disclose a “major” cybersecurity incident, T-Mobile has gotten pwned so much, and more...
Don’t Let API Leaks Sink Your Ship | API Security Newsletter
Leaks of API keys and other secrets. The industry has been abuzz with news about attacks – and the ongoing ripple effect – involving leaked API keys, credentials and other secrets. This adds another dimension to your API attack surface, which in turn complicates your defenses and adds to your...
A week in security (July 25 - July 31)
Last week on Malwarebytes Labs: Update Google Chrome now! New version includes 11 important security patches Lightning Framework, modular Linux malware Malware spent months hoovering up credit card details from 300 US restaurants Lock down your Neopets account: Data breach being investigated Demo...
A week in security (November 18 – 24)
Last week on Malwarebytes Labs, we looked at stalkerware’s legal enforcement problem, announced our cooperation with other security vendors and advocacy groups to launch Coalition Against Stalkerware, published our fall 2019 review of exploit kits, looked at how Deepfake on LinkedIn makes for...
T-Mobile Hacked — 2 Million Customers' Personal Data Stolen
T-Mobile today confirmed that the telecom giant suffered a security breach on its US servers on August 20 that may have resulted in the leak of "some" personal information of up to 2 million T-Mobile customers. The leaked information includes customers' name, billing zip code, phone number, email...
Update: Hacking Group TeaMp0isoN Claims Breach of T-Mobile
The hacking group TeaMp0isoN claims to have compromised Web servers used by T-Mobile, and absconded with account information for company employees, including members of T-Mobile’s media team. The group used a post on its official Twitter account taking responsibility for the attack, which targete...