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Latest coverage for LAPSUS$

Coverage of incidents reportedly linked to LAPSUS$, with analysis of infrastructure and disruption, security impact, and defensive guidance.

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Background for this topic.

LAPSUS$ is a name used in public reporting for an intrusion set associated with several high-profile compromises, particularly during 2021–2022. Investigations and victim disclosures linked the activity to social engineering, stolen credentials, account takeover—including reported abuse of help-desk or telecom recovery processes—and theft or attempted extortion of data and source code. Attribution, membership, and the relationship between individual incidents remain subject to change, so reports should be assessed for the evidence supporting each linkage.

Its security significance is the demonstrated exposure of identity and support workflows rather than reliance on a single malware family. Defenders should prioritize phishing-resistant multifactor authentication for privileged users, tightly control password resets and number-porting requests, limit administrator access, and monitor unusual identity-provider, cloud, and repository activity. After a suspected compromise, revoke sessions and tokens, rotate credentials and exposed secrets, preserve authentication and support-desk logs, and determine what data or code was accessed. These steps also help distinguish confirmed intrusion facts from claims made during extortion or incomplete early reporting.

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Plus: Microsoft reveals gang pulled off limited source code heist after single account compromised Identity management as-a-service platform Okta says the Lapsus$ extortion gang may in fact have managed to see some of its customers' data, and Microsoft has admitted the crew got its grubby paws on some source code.…

The Register 4 years, 3 months ago

Okta admits Lapsus$ attack revealed customer data

Microsoft confesses gang pulled off limited source code heist after single account compromised Identity management as-a-service platform Okta has admitted that the Lapsus$ extortion gang managed to see some of its customers' data, and Microsoft has admitted the gang got its grubby paws on some source code.…