Iran's Cyber Crosshairs Focus Beyond Critical Infrastructure
Obscurity isn't a defense. If your company has any Internet-facing vulnerability, you're at risk from multiple threats.
Yasna brings together recent headlines from selected sources and makes them easier to sort with tags, filters, and search.
Search across headline titles and summaries.
Weekly headline count for the current query.
Obscurity isn't a defense. If your company has any Internet-facing vulnerability, you're at risk from multiple threats.
As the war with Iran continues, breach attempts targeting the United Arab Emirates tripled in a few weeks — many targeting critical infrastructure.
Attackers compromised Internet-facing OT devices and caused file and display manipulation, operational disruption, and financial losses across sectors.
Iran and its supporters have taken to cyberspace to retaliate for US-Israeli military action, with an aim to cause economic and physical disruption.
The regime's cyber-espionage strategy employs dual-use targeting, collecting info that can support both military needs and broader political objectives.
The threat group tracked as APT42 remains on the warpath with various phishing and other social engineering campaigns, as tensions with Israel rise.
A state-sponsored hacking team employed a clever masquerade and elaborate back-end infrastructure as part of a five-year info-stealing campaign that compromised the US State and Treasury Departments, and hundreds of thousands of accounts overall.
Israel prepares for a response to Iran's April 14 drone and missile attack.
Iran has taken a page from the Russian playbook: Passing off military groups as civilians for the sake of PR and plausible deniability.
US reportedly launched a cyberattack against an Iranian military ship suspected of helping Houthi rebel pirates menacing shipping traffic in the Red Sea.
The prolific APT repeatedly compromised targets in healthcare, manufacturing, and government with new lightweight downloaders that blend into network traffic for evasion.
Cyber mimics life, as Iran uses Lebanese hackers to attack its bête noire.
A suspected Iranian threat actor known as UNC3890 is gathering intel that could be used for kinetic strikes against global shipping targets.