How an Interdiction Mindset Can Help Win War on Cyberattacks
The US military and law enforcement learned to outthink insurgents. It's time for cybersecurity to learn to outsmart and outmaneuver threat actors with the same framework.
Coverage of named threat actors and intrusion sets examines reported incidents, infrastructure, disruption, and defensive guidance.
Search across headline titles and summaries.
Background for this topic.
Coverage under this tag concerns a named threat actor or intrusion set: an individual, group, or organized operation assessed to be responsible for malicious cyber activity. Reports may describe incidents, malware, attack infrastructure, disruption efforts, or analyst assessments. Attribution is often provisional, so actor names and reported links should be treated as intelligence judgments rather than established identity, nationality, sponsorship, or motive.
For defenders, such reporting can help connect incidents and prioritize monitoring, but indicators and techniques may be reused or become obsolete. Validate reported infrastructure, hashes, and behaviors against local telemetry; use confirmed weaknesses to guide vulnerability remediation and access controls. If activity is suspected, preserve relevant logs and evidence, contain affected accounts or systems, and coordinate investigation without relying on an actor label alone.
The US military and law enforcement learned to outthink insurgents. It's time for cybersecurity to learn to outsmart and outmaneuver threat actors with the same framework.
Tenable released details of a Google Cloud Run flaw that prior to remediation allowed a threat actor to escalate privileges.
Threat actors are exploiting a vulnerability in Ivanti Connect Secure first disclosed by the vendor in January.