-->
#1 Trusted Cybersecurity News Platform
Followed by 5.70+ million
The Hacker News Logo
Get the Latest News
cybersecurity

Proxy Network | Breaking Cybersecurity News | The Hacker News

Category — Proxy Network
Fake 7-Zip Installers Turn Devices Into Residential Proxy Nodes

Fake 7-Zip Installers Turn Devices Into Residential Proxy Nodes

Jul 09, 2026 Malware / Threat Intelligence
Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed details of a new threat actor dubbed Lurking Lizard that has been operating an end-to-end malicious residential proxy business using an infrastructure comprising more than 230 lookalike domains. The activity dates back to at least August 2022, according to DNS threat intelligence firm Infoblox. Once such campaign, observed earlier this year, involved the actor luring victims with a trojanized 7-Zip installer hosted on a domain named "7zip[.]com," covertly recruiting compromised devices as proxy nodes. Lurking Lizard is also known to impersonate major proxy providers, including IPIDEA , SmartProxy (now Decodo), IP Royal, and 911Proxy, not to mention going to the extent of running fake "independent" review sites to drive traffic to its own scam storefronts. Interestingly, IPIDEA's infrastructure was dismantled by Google in an operation earlier this January.
AryStinger Malware Infects 4,300 Legacy Routers to Build Reconnaissance Proxy Network

AryStinger Malware Infects 4,300 Legacy Routers to Build Reconnaissance Proxy Network

Jun 22, 2026 IoT Security / Vulnerability
A new malware family is turning forgotten home routers into a distributed reconnaissance and proxy network, not the DDoS botnet these devices usually end up in. QiAnXin's  XLab  calls it AryStinger and counts at least 4,300 infected routers, a total it says is still rising. The distinction matters. AryStinger exists for the stage of an attack that comes before the break-in. Infected devices scan the internet, fingerprint services, enumerate subdomains, tunnel traffic, and run commands on demand, then ship the results back to the operator. Each router becomes a footprinting node and a relay that hides where the real attacker is. Old chips, older bugs The campaign goes after routers built on Realtek's RTL819X chips, hardware that was current around 2012 to 2015. XLab first saw it on March 12, 2026, spreading from a single IP, 107.150.106.14. The binary it pushed was a Linux ELF that no engine on VirusTotal flagged, exploiting two flaws from another era: CVE-2013-3307 ...
Expert Insights Articles Videos
Cybersecurity Resources