#1 Trusted Cybersecurity News Platform
Followed by 5.20+ million
The Hacker News Logo
Subscribe – Get Latest News
AWS EKS Security Best Practices

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

Operation Card Shop : FBI Arrested 24 Credit Card Cyber Criminals

Operation Card Shop : FBI Arrested 24 Credit Card Cyber Criminals

Jun 27, 2012
Operation Card Shop : FBI Arrested 24 Credit Card Cyber Criminals The FBI has arrested 24 cybercriminals part of an international law enforcement operation aiming to arrest and prosecute the users of a sting operation called "Carder Profit". The suspects, collared after a two-year investigation dubbed "Operation Card Shop," allegedly stole credit card and banking data and exchanged it with each other online. " We put a major dent in cybercrime ," she said. " This is an unprecedented operation. "In the sting, which they called Operation Card Shop, undercover investigators created an online bazaar to catch buyers and sellers of credit card data and other private financial information. They also aimed at people who clone and produce the physical credit cards that are then used to buy merchandise. Some CarderProfit users apparently learned of the involvement of the feds months ago. A Twitter user with the name @JoshTheGod wrote that "has informants and most likly to be belie...
Hacker made calls worth £10,000 from public phone

Hacker made calls worth £10,000 from public phone

Jun 27, 2012
Hacker made calls worth £10,000 from public phone Computer expert Dariusz Ganski, of Sunny Bank, Kingswood, used a router to tap into BT phone boxes and made hours of calls to expensive numbers. He make calls worth £10,000 of premium-line bills and he has been jailed for 18 months. Prosecutor David Maunder commented: " Police located the vehicle and they found Mr Ganski with two laptop computers and numerous mobile telephones." Bristol Crown Court heard that the 27-year-old committed his crimes to get electronic credits for music and on-line games, while still on licence from prison for almost identical offences. Ganski made 648 calls, totalling nearly 43 hours, from a phone box in Kelston, North East Somerset. BT was alerted to unpaid calls costing them about £7,700 on that box. He said: " Your counsel says you're intelligent. What a waste that what you really do is go round defrauding companies in this way. "
The tale of LulzSec, two admits targeting websites

The tale of LulzSec, two admits targeting websites

Jun 27, 2012
The tale of LulzSec  two admits targeting websites Two British members of the notorious Lulz Security hacking collective have pleaded guilty to a slew of computer crimes, in the latest blow against online troublemakers whose exploits have grabbed headlines and embarrassed governments around the world. LulzSec members Ryan Cleary , 20, and Jake Davis , 19, pleaded guilty in a London court to launching distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks last year against several targets, including the CIA, the Arizona State Police, PBS, Sony, Nintendo, 20th Century Fox, News International and the U.K.'s Serious Organized Crime Agency and National Health Service Ryan Cleary is from Essex, United Kingdom who was arrested by Metropolitan Police on June 21 2011 and charged with violating the Computer Misuse Act and the Criminal Law Act 1977. He was accused of being a member of LulzSec but was not a member of the said group although he admitted that he did run one of the IRC channels that t...
cyber security

SaaS Security Made Simple

websiteAppomniSaaS Security / SSPM
Simplify SaaS security with a vendor checklist, RFP, and expert guidance.
The Hidden Risks of SaaS: Why Built-In Protections Aren't Enough for Modern Data Resilience

The Hidden Risks of SaaS: Why Built-In Protections Aren't Enough for Modern Data Resilience

Jun 26, 2025Data Protection / Compliance
SaaS Adoption is Skyrocketing, Resilience Hasn't Kept Pace SaaS platforms have revolutionized how businesses operate. They simplify collaboration, accelerate deployment, and reduce the overhead of managing infrastructure. But with their rise comes a subtle, dangerous assumption: that the convenience of SaaS extends to resilience. It doesn't. These platforms weren't built with full-scale data protection in mind . Most follow a shared responsibility model — wherein the provider ensures uptime and application security, but the data inside is your responsibility. In a world of hybrid architectures, global teams, and relentless cyber threats, that responsibility is harder than ever to manage. Modern organizations are being stretched across: Hybrid and multi-cloud environments with decentralized data sprawl Complex integration layers between IaaS, SaaS, and legacy systems Expanding regulatory pressure with steeper penalties for noncompliance Escalating ransomware threats and inside...
RSA SecurIDs Get Cracked In 13 Minutes

RSA SecurIDs Get Cracked In 13 Minutes

Jun 26, 2012
RSA SecurIDs Get Cracked In 13 Minutes Major corporations, government agencies, and small businesses all hand out RSA SecurID fob keychains to employees so that they can log in to their systems for security reasons and If you're used to seeing a device like this on a daily basis, you probably assume that it's a vital security measure to keep your employer's networks and data secure. A team of computer scientists beg to differ, however, because they've cracked the encryption it uses wide open. In a paper called " Efficient padding oracle attacks on cryptographic hardware ," researchers Romain Bardou, Lorenzo Simionato, Graham Steel, Joe-Kai Tsay, Riccardo Focardi and Yusuke Kawamoto detail the vulnerabilities that expose the imported keys from various cryptographic devices that rely on the PKCS#11 standard. They managed to develop an approach that requires just 13 minutes to crack the device's encryption. RSA Security, a division of the data storage company EMC, is one of the l...
Drones can be hijacked by terrorist, Researchers says Vulnerability Exist

Drones can be hijacked by terrorist, Researchers says Vulnerability Exist

Jun 26, 2012
Drones can be hijacked by terrorist , Researchers says Vulnerability Exist Fox News is reporting that researchers say that terrorists or drug gangs, with the right kind of equipment could turn the drones into "suicide" weapons. A University of Texas researcher illustrated that fact in a series of test flights recently, showing that GPS "spoofing" could cause a drone to veer off its course and even purposely crash. This is particularly worrisome, given that the US is looking to grant US airspace to drones for domestic jobs including police surveillance or even FedEx deliveries In other words, with the right equipment, anyone can take control of a GPS-guided drone and make it do anything they want it to. Spoofers are a much more dangerous type of technology because they actually mimic a command by the GPS system and convince the drone it is receiving new coordinates. With his device what Humphreys calls the most advanced spoofer ever built (at a cost of just $1,000) he was...
PayPal will Pay Security Researchers for finding Vulnerabilities

PayPal will Pay Security Researchers for finding Vulnerabilities

Jun 26, 2012
PayPal will Pay Security Researchers for finding Vulnerabilities Payment services provider PayPal will reward security researchers who discover vulnerabilities in its website with money, if they report their findings to the company in a responsible manner. If you manage to find a security flaw in any of PayPal's products, you may be entitled to a cash reward. " I'm pleased to announce that we have updated our original bug reporting process into a paid 'bug bounty' program, " PayPal's Chief Information Security Officer Michael Barrett said in a  blog post  on Thursday. While Barrett disclosed vulnerability categories, he did not say how much cash the firm will be offering. PayPal plans to categorize reported bugs into one of four categories: XSS (Cross Site Scripting), CSRF (Cross Site Request Forgery), SQL Injection or Authentication Bypass  Researchers need to have a verified PayPal account in order to receive the monetary rewards. " I original...
Apple : 0 | Flashback trojan : 1 , Apple admits malware defeat

Apple : 0 | Flashback trojan : 1 , Apple admits malware defeat

Jun 26, 2012
Apple : 0 | Flashback trojan : 1 , Apple admits malware defeat Apple has quietly removed a statement from its website that the Mac operating system isn't susceptible to viruses. Apple released a patch to a Java vulnerability that lead to the infection of roughly 600,000 Macs with the Flashback Trojan earlier this year, there were claims weeks later from security researchers that hundreds of thousands of Macs were still infected. Apple is one of the single software companies that hasn't really faced the problem of viruses, for years claiming their operating system is the most secure among all. The specific language about the operating system, " It doesn't get PC viruses " was replaced with " It's built to be safe. " But now, Apple may be taking security threats more seriously. Apple is introducing a new app security measure called Gatekeeper in the upcoming release of Mountain Lion, the latest version of Mac OS X. The majority of malware might still be floating around ...
Expert Insights Articles Videos
Cybersecurity Resources