Security news aggregator

Latest cybersecurity reporting from selected sources.

Yasna brings together recent headlines from selected sources and makes them easier to sort with tags, filters, and search.

6 headlines in this view

Refine the feed

Search across headline titles and summaries.

Volume over time

Weekly headline count for the current query.

Showing 6 most recent headlines Filtered view
Bank Info Security 10 months, 1 week ago

Salesloft Drift Hack Claims New Victims in Tenable, Qualys

Salesloft Says Hackers Broke Into Its GitHub RepositoryCybersecurity firms Tenable and Qualys fell to attacks stemming from hacker theft of authentication tokens from a third-party tool often integrated into Salesforce. The firms disclosed their exposure to the attack that lifted access tokens from marketing-as-a-service software provider Salesloft.

The Register 10 months, 2 weeks ago

Stolen OAuth tokens expose Palo Alto customer data

Security firm's Salesforce instance accessed using credentials stolen from Salesloft's Drift platform breach Palo Alto Networks is writing to customers that may have had commercially sensitive data exposed after criminals used stolen OAuth credentials lifted from the Salesloft Drift break-in to gain entry to its Salesforce instance.…

Bank Info Security 10 months, 2 weeks ago

Salesloft Drift Attacks Exposed Zscaler Customer Data

'Widespread Data Theft Campaign' Compromised Many Drift OAuth Tokens, Warn ExpertsThreat researchers report that "a widespread data theft campaign" traces to attackers stealing OAuth access tokens for applications integrated with Salesloft's AI chatbot Drift, then exfiltrating data. Victims include Salesforce customer Zscaler. Google Workspace instances were also breached.

AT&T Corp. disclosed today that a new data breach has exposed phone call and text message records for roughly 110 million people -- nearly all of its customers. AT&T said it delayed disclosing the incident in response to "national security and public safety concerns," noting that some of the records included data that could be used to determine where a call was made or text message sent. AT&T also acknowledged the customer records were exposed in a cloud database that was protected only by a username and password (no multi-factor authentication needed).