Given that two people—or maybe the same person—leaked the LockBit 3.0 compiler on Twitter, it appears that LockBit has had a breach. . A newly registered Twitter account by the name of “Ali Qushji” claims that their team broke into LockBits’ servers and discovered a compiler of the LockBit 3.0 ransomware encryptor, according to security researcher 3xp0rt. VX-Underground reported that they were approached on September 10th by a person going by the handle “protonleaks,” who also supplied a copy of the builder, after security expert 3xp0rt tweeted about the hacked LockBit 3.0 builder. The public face of the LockBit business, LockBitSupp, asserts that they were not hacked and that a frustrated developer instead exposed the secret ransomware compiler. . A fresh Twitter profile asserts that a group hacked into the servers of LockBit, exposing their ransomware programming. Continue for details.. LockBit Code Leak,Cybersecurity Research,Ransomware Threats. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
In yet another shocking admission by Facebook, the company said that not “tens of thousands” but “millions” of Instagram users were actually affected by the password leak that happened last month. . Back then, Facebook had announced in a blog post dated March 21, 2019 that passwords were left in a “readable format”, which allowed at least 2,000 Facebook engineers and developers with access to the company’s internal systems to view the actual plain text passwords. The link for this article located at TechWorm is no longer available. . Facebook disclosed a critical security issue where millions of Instagram passwords were insecurely stored in plain text format.. Instagram Password Leak, Data Exposure, Facebook Security Issues, User Privacy Risks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Hacking Team has warned that a devastating data breach it suffered will allow its spying tools to be used by criminals and terrorists.. The Milan-based security company, which develops surveillance tools for mostly government clients, saw more than 400GB of internal data released on Sunday, including emails, clients lists, financial information and source code. The link for this article located at CSO Online is no longer available. . The Italian cybersecurity firm, Cyber Defense Corp, alerts users about vulnerabilities following a data leak, sparking fears about potential criminal exploitation.. Hacking Team, Data Breach, Cybercrime Tools, Information Security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Researchers from MWR Labs find a way to exploit a Chrome vulnerability, sidestep Windows 7 safety measures, and do whatever they want on the operating system.. Security researchers at MWR Labs have won a $100,000 prize at the Pwn2Own hacking competition in Vancouver. The link for this article located at CNET is no longer available. . Specialists from MWR Labs took advantage of a Chrome vulnerability during Pwn2Own, securing a $100,000 prize while exposing flaws in Windows.. Chrome Exploit, Windows Weakness, Pwn2Own Competition. . Dave Wreski
Some 250,000 diplomatic dispatches from the US State Department have accidentally been made completely public. The files include the names of informants who now must fear for their lives. It is the result of a series of blunders by WikiLeaks and its supporters.. In the end, all the efforts at confidentiality came to naught. Everyone who knows a bit about computers can now have a look into the 250,000 US diplomatic dispatches that WikiLeaks made available to select news outlets late last year. All of them. What's more, they are the unedited, unredacted versions complete with the names of US diplomats' informants -- sensitive names from Iran, China, Afghanistan, the Arab world and elsewhere. The link for this article located at Spiegel is no longer available. . Unintentional release of 250,000 American diplomatic documents creates significant worries regarding the security of informants.. Diplomatic Cables, Data Breach, Information Security, WikiLeaks, Confidentiality Issues. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Numerous confirmed sources reporting to us, at this precise moment, that successive blog posts turn out to be a crappy way to convey the details of important vulnerabilities. . Seriously, folks: this started out fun, because we were dealing with a laboratory-isolated specimen of a problem that Apple was in a position to easily fix. But it turns out, that The link for this article located at Matasano Chargen is no longer available. . Essential discussions concerning weaknesses emerge; we evaluate potential threats and their implications for system integrity.. QuickTime Exploit, Software Flaws, Threat Exposure. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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