How hidden mining threatens your business
Cybercriminals weaponize hidden mining. We tell you how it works and how to protect your company
71 articles
Cybercriminals weaponize hidden mining. We tell you how it works and how to protect your company
Kaspersky Lab publishes an update on Russian-speaking Sofacy APT activity in 2017
The story of Kaspersky Lab’s alleged misdeeds is juicy — let’s check out how this fiction is made.
What 2017 will be remembered for, which of our experts’ predictions came true, and what they think about the future
Most modern, enterprise-level companies understand the menace of cyberthreats to business. Some of them have tried to solve cybersecurity problems with the help of system administrators and security software, but
In October 2017, Kaspersky Lab initiated a thorough review of our telemetry logs in relation to alleged 2015 incidents described in the media. These are the preliminary results.
Kaspersky Lab and partners reveal details of the joint investigation of the Lazarus group hazardous activity.
At The SAS 2016, Kaspersky Lab researchers discussed the newly discovered Poseidon
Fraudsters portfolio updated: now they’ve learnt to steal money from banks directly. How did it happen?
In the new installment of our explosive hit series “Infosec news” you’ll find: the breach of Bugzilla, Carbanak is coming back and Turla uses Level-God hard to track techniques to hide servers.
Kaspersky Lab’s researchers have found that Russian-speaking Turla APT group is exploiting satellites to mask its operation ant to hide command-and-control servers
Kaspersky Lab has discovered an advanced attack on its own internal network and is sharing its investigation results. TL;DR – Customers are safe; neither products nor services have been compromised.
Yet another APT of the ‘Dukes family’ is hitting high-profile targets, including the US government office.
Kaspersky Lab researchers uncovered Desert Falcons, the first exclusively Arabic APT group, presenting their findings at the Security Analyst Summit in Cancun.
The Carbanak APT group managed to steal a total of $1 bln from dozens of banks worldwide.
Kaspersky Lab experts analyze the security and privacy trends that emerged in 2014, including anonymous Tor browsing, ransomware, APT attacks and more.
In this Talk Security podcast, Threatpost’s Chris Brook and Brian Donohue discuss the move to encrypt the Web, the Regin APT campaign and more.
A new APT campaign called Regin targets the usual victims plus a prestigious cryptographer and the GSM standard on which most cellular communications occur.