China Upgrades the Backdoor It Uses to Spy on Telcos Globally
Chinese APT Red Menshen's super-advanced BPFdoor malware defeats traditional cybersecurity protections. All telcos can do, really, is try hunting it down.
Stay updated on the latest backdoor threats in cybersecurity. Discover news, analysis, and insights on covert access vulnerabilities.
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Background for this topic.
A backdoor is a hidden method within software or hardware that allows bypassing normal authentication to access a system or network. These can be intentionally created by developers for maintenance or debugging but are frequently exploited or implanted by attackers to maintain unauthorized, persistent access. Backdoors often appear as undocumented commands, hidden user accounts, or covert network services designed to evade detection.
In cybersecurity, backdoors enable attackers to circumvent security controls, increasing the risk of prolonged system compromise and data exposure. Detecting backdoors requires careful code review, monitoring for unusual system behavior, and verifying integrity through trusted baselines. Identifying backdoor indicators in malware or attacker infrastructure is critical for limiting unauthorized access and reducing attacker dwell time within networks. Defensive measures focus on eliminating hidden access points and strengthening authentication mechanisms.
Chinese APT Red Menshen's super-advanced BPFdoor malware defeats traditional cybersecurity protections. All telcos can do, really, is try hunting it down.
TeamPCP orchestrated one of the most sophisticated multi-ecosystem supply chain campaigns publicly documented to date that cascaded through developer tooling and compromised LiteLLM, exposing how AI proxy services that concentrate API keys and cloud credentials become high-value collateral when supply chain attacks compromise upstream dependencies.
TeamPCP, the threat actor behind the recent compromises of Trivy and KICS, has now compromised a popular Python package named litellm, pushing two malicious versions containing a credential harvester, a Kubernetes lateral movement toolkit, and a persistent backdoor
Another week, another reminder that the internet is still a mess. Systems people thought were secure are being broken in simple ways, showing many still ignore basic advisories