-->
#1 Trusted Cybersecurity News Platform
Followed by 5.20+ million
The Hacker News Logo
Subscribe – Get Latest News
Security Service Edge

The Hacker News | #1 Trusted Source for Cybersecurity News — Index Page

The Zero-Day Scramble is Avoidable: A Guide to Attack Surface Reduction

The Zero-Day Scramble is Avoidable: A Guide to Attack Surface Reduction

Mar 10, 2026 Vulnerability Management / Shadow IT
You can't control when the next critical vulnerability drops. You can control how much of your environment is exposed when it does. The problem is that most teams have more internet-facing exposure than they realise. Intruder's Head of Security digs into why this happens and how teams can manage it deliberately. Time-to-exploit is shrinking The larger and less controlled your attack surface is, the more opportunities exist for exploitation. And the window to act on them is shrinking fast. For the most serious vulnerabilities, disclosure to exploitation can be as short as 24 to 48 hours. Zero Day Clock projects that time-to-exploit will be just minutes by 2028. That's not a lot of time when you consider what has to happen before a patch is deployed: running scans, waiting for results, raising tickets, agreeing priorities, implementing applies to ’the fix’ too, happy to drop ‘verifying’ if that’s easier. If disclosure lands out of hours, it takes even longer. In many c...
APT28 Uses BEARDSHELL and COVENANT Malware to Spy on Ukrainian Military

APT28 Uses BEARDSHELL and COVENANT Malware to Spy on Ukrainian Military

Mar 10, 2026 Cyber Espionage / Threat Intelligence
The Russian state-sponsored hacking group tracked as APT28 has been observed using a pair of implants dubbed BEARDSHELL and COVENANT to facilitate long‑term surveillance of Ukrainian military personnel. The two malware families have been put to use since April 2024, ESET said in a new report shared with The Hacker News. APT28, also tracked as Blue Athena, BlueDelta, Fancy Bear, Fighting Ursa, Forest Blizzard (formerly Strontium), FROZENLAKE, Iron Twilight, ITG05, Pawn Storm, Sednit, Sofacy, and TA422, is a nation-state actor affiliated with Unit 26165 of the Russian Federation's military intelligence agency GRU. The threat actor's malware arsenal consists of tools like BEARDSHELL and COVENANT, along with another program codenamed SLIMAGENT that's capable of logging keystrokes, capturing screenshots, and collecting clipboard data. SLIMAGENT was first publicly documented by the Computer Emergency Response Team of Ukraine (CERT-UA) in June 2025. SLIMAGENT, per the Slo...
Threat Actors Mass-Scan Salesforce Experience Cloud via Modified AuraInspector Tool

Threat Actors Mass-Scan Salesforce Experience Cloud via Modified AuraInspector Tool

Mar 10, 2026 Cloud Security / API Security
Salesforce has warned of an increase in threat actor activity that's aimed at exploiting misconfigurations in publicly accessible Experience Cloud sites by making use of a customized version of an open-source tool called AuraInspector. The activity, per the company, involves the exploitation of customers' overly permissive Experience Cloud guest user configurations to obtain access to sensitive data. "Evidence indicates the threat actor is leveraging a modified version of the open-source tool AuraInspector [...] to perform mass scanning of public-facing Experience Cloud sites," Salesforce said . "While the original AuraInspector is limited to identifying vulnerable objects by probing API endpoints that these sites expose (specifically the /s/sfsites/aura endpoint), the actor has developed a custom version of the tool capable of going beyond identification to actually extract data — exploiting overly permissive guest user settings." AuraInspector refe...
cyber security

Practical Tools for Modern CISOs + Security Leaders

websiteWizCISO / Product Security
Get 5 of the most widely used CISO resources in one place. Each asset is designed to solve real, recurring security leadership challenges.
cyber security

OpenClaw: RCE, Leaked Tokens, and 21K Exposed Instances in 2 Weeks

websiteRecoSaaS Security / AI Security
The viral AI agent connects to Slack, Gmail, and Drive—and most security teams have zero visibility into it.
CISA Flags SolarWinds, Ivanti, and Workspace One Vulnerabilities as Actively Exploited

CISA Flags SolarWinds, Ivanti, and Workspace One Vulnerabilities as Actively Exploited

Mar 10, 2026 Vulnerability / Enterprise Security
The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) on Monday added three security flaws to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities ( KEV ) catalog, based on evidence of active exploitation. The vulnerability list is as follows - CVE-2021-22054 (CVSS score: 7.5) - A server-side request forgery ( SSRF ) vulnerability in Omnissa Workspace One UEM (formerly VMware Workspace One UEM) that could allow a malicious actor with network access to UEM to send requests without authentication and to gain access to sensitive information. CVE-2025-26399 (CVSS score: 9.8) - A deserialization of untrusted data vulnerability in the AjaxProxy component of SolarWinds Web Help Desk that could allow an attacker to run commands on the host machine. CVE-2026-1603 (CVSS score: 8.6) - An authentication bypass using an alternate path or channel vulnerability in Ivanti Endpoint Manager that could allow a remote unauthenticated attacker to leak specific stored credential data. The addition o...
Malicious npm Package Posing as OpenClaw Installer Deploys RAT, Steals macOS Credentials

Malicious npm Package Posing as OpenClaw Installer Deploys RAT, Steals macOS Credentials

Mar 09, 2026 Malware / Developer Security
Cybersecurity researchers have discovered a malicious npm package that masquerades as an OpenClaw installer to deploy a remote access trojan (RAT) and steal sensitive data from compromised hosts. The package, named " @openclaw-ai/openclawai ," was uploaded to the registry by a user named "openclaw-ai" on March 3, 2026. It has been downloaded 178 times to date. The library is still available for download as of writing. JFrog, which discovered the package, said it's designed to steal system credentials, browser data, crypto wallets, SSH keys, Apple Keychain databases, and iMessage history, as well as install a persistent RAT with remote access capabilities, SOCKS5 proxy, and live browser session cloning. It's tracking the activity under the name GhostClaw. "The attack is notable for its broad data collection, its use of social engineering to harvest the victim's system password, and the sophistication of its persistence and C2 [command-and-contro...
UNC4899 Breached Crypto Firm After Developer AirDropped Trojanized File to Work Device

UNC4899 Breached Crypto Firm After Developer AirDropped Trojanized File to Work Device

Mar 09, 2026 DevOps / Threat Intelligence
The North Korean threat actor known as UNC4899 is suspected to be behind a sophisticated cloud compromise campaign targeting a cryptocurrency organization in 2025 to steal millions of dollars in cryptocurrency. The activity has been attributed with moderate confidence to the state-sponsored adversary, which is also tracked under the cryptonyms Jade Sleet, PUKCHONG, Slow Pisces, and TraderTraitor.  "This incident is notable for its blend of social engineering, exploitation of personal-to-corporate device peer-to-peer data (P2P) transfer mechanisms, workflows, and eventual pivot to the cloud to employ living-off-the-cloud (LOTC) techniques," the tech giant noted in its H1 2026 Cloud Threat Horizons Report shared with The Hacker News. Upon gaining access to the cloud environment, the attackers are said to have abused legitimate DevOps workflows to harvest credentials, break out of the confines of containers, and tamper with Cloud SQL databases to facilitate the cryptocu...
⚡ Weekly Recap: Qualcomm 0-Day, iOS Exploit Chains, AirSnitch Attack & Vibe-Coded Malware

⚡ Weekly Recap: Qualcomm 0-Day, iOS Exploit Chains, AirSnitch Attack & Vibe-Coded Malware

Mar 09, 2026 Cybersecurity / Hacking
Another week in cybersecurity. Another week of "you've got to be kidding me." Attackers were busy. Defenders were busy. And somewhere in the middle, a whole lot of people had a very bad Monday morning. That's kind of just how it goes now. The good news? There were some actual wins this week. Real ones. The kind where the good guys showed up, did the work, and made a dent. It doesn't always happen, so when it does, it's worth noting. The bad news? For every win, there's a fresh headache waiting right behind it. New tricks, old tricks dressed up in new clothes, and a few things that'll make you want to go touch grass and never log back in. But you will. We all do. So here's everything that mattered this week — the wins, the warnings, and the stuff you really shouldn't ignore. ⚡ Threat of the Week Tycoon 2FA and LeakBase Operations Dismantled — The infrastructure hosting the Tycoon2FA service, which Europol said was among the largest advers...
Can the Security Platform Finally Deliver for the Mid-Market?

Can the Security Platform Finally Deliver for the Mid-Market?

Mar 09, 2026 Endpoint Security / Security Operations
Mid-market organizations are constantly striving to achieve security levels on a par with their enterprise peers. With heightened awareness of supply chain attacks, your customers and business partners are defining the security level you must meet. What if you could be the enabler for your organization to remain competitive — and help win business — by easily demonstrating that you meet these strict security levels? The challenge, of course, is how to do so with a small budget and a lean IT and security team. The security platform has long been seen as the mechanism for reducing complexity by consolidating security tools. However, it has never really lived up to its promise. Or has it? An upcoming webinar explores whether the security platform model can finally deliver on its original vision — simplifying operations, reducing cost, and strengthening security posture for mid-market organizations. Join Bitdefender to learn how Bitdefender GravityZone is making the dream of afforda...
Chrome Extension Turns Malicious After Ownership Transfer, Enabling Code Injection and Data Theft

Chrome Extension Turns Malicious After Ownership Transfer, Enabling Code Injection and Data Theft

Mar 09, 2026 Browser Security / Threat Intelligence
Two Google Chrome extensions have turned malicious after what appears to be a case of ownership transfer , offering attackers a way to push malware to downstream customers, inject arbitrary code, and harvest sensitive data. The extensions in question, both originally associated with a developer named "akshayanuonline@gmail.com" (BuildMelon), are listed below - QuickLens - Search Screen with Google Lens (ID: kdenlnncndfnhkognokgfpabgkgehodd) - 7,000 users ShotBird - Scrolling Screenshots, Tweet Images & Editor (ID: gengfhhkjekmlejbhmmopegofnoifnjp) - 800 users While QuickLens is no longer available for download from the Chrome Web Store, ShotBird remains accessible as of writing. ShotBird was originally launched in November 2024, with its developer, Akshay Anu S (@AkshayAnuOnline), claiming on X that the extension is suitable for "creating professional, studio-like visuals," and that all processing happens locally. According to research published by mo...
Web Server Exploits and Mimikatz Used in Attacks Targeting Asian Critical Infrastructure

Web Server Exploits and Mimikatz Used in Attacks Targeting Asian Critical Infrastructure

Mar 09, 2026 Threat Intelligence / Web Security
High-value organizations located in South, Southeast, and East Asia have been targeted by a Chinese threat actor as part of a years-long campaign. The activity, which has targeted aviation, energy, government, law enforcement, pharmaceutical, technology, and telecommunications sectors, has been attributed by Palo Alto Networks Unit 42 to a previously undocumented threat activity group dubbed CL-UNK-1068 , where "CL" refers to "cluster" and "UNK" stands for unknown motivation. However, the security vendor has assessed with "moderate-to-high confidence" that the primary objective of the campaign is cyber espionage. "Our analysis reveals a multi-faceted tool set that includes custom malware, modified open-source utilities, and living-off-the-land binaries (LOLBINs)," security researcher Tom Fakterman said . "These provide a simple, effective way for the attackers to maintain a persistent presence within targeted environments....
OpenAI Codex Security Scanned 1.2 Million Commits and Found 10,561 High-Severity Issues

OpenAI Codex Security Scanned 1.2 Million Commits and Found 10,561 High-Severity Issues

Mar 07, 2026 DevSecOps / Artificial Intelligence
OpenAI on Friday began rolling out Codex Security , an artificial intelligence (AI)-powered security agent that's designed to find, validate, and propose fixes for vulnerabilities. The feature is available in a research preview to ChatGPT Pro, Enterprise, Business, and Edu customers via the Codex web with free usage for the next month. "It builds deep context about your project to identify complex vulnerabilities that other agentic tools miss, surfacing higher-confidence findings with fixes that meaningfully improve the security of your system while sparing you from the noise of insignificant bugs," the company said . Codex Security represents an evolution of Aardvark⁠ , which OpenAI unveiled in private beta in October 2025 as a way for developers and security teams to detect and fix security vulnerabilities at scale. Over the last 30 days, Codex Security has scanned more than 1.2 million commits across external repositories over the course of the beta, identifying ...
Expert Insights Articles Videos
Cybersecurity Resources