credential theft
Cybersecurity & Risk
Algeria Digital Banking Security: Threats and Defences in a $7B e-Commerce Market
⚡ Key Takeaways Algeria’s 30–35 fintech startups, including Banxy (Algeria’s first fully mobile bank) and digital payment platforms, face industry-wide...
Cybersecurity & Risk
TeamPCP’s 317-Package Attack: How Open-Source Supply Chains Break in 20 Minutes
⚡ Key Takeaways In May 2026, threat group TeamPCP released 630+ malicious versions across 317 npm packages in 20 minutes...
Cybersecurity & Risk
Quasar Linux RAT: How Stolen Developer Credentials Fuel Software Supply Chain Attacks
⚡ Key Takeaways Trend Micro researchers documented QLNX (Quasar Linux RAT), a sophisticated Linux implant that targets developer workstations to...
Cybersecurity & Risk
IBM X-Force 2026: AI-Driven Attacks and Credential Theft Reshape the Threat Landscape
⚡ Key Takeaways The IBM X-Force 2026 Threat Intelligence Index found vulnerability exploitation became the leading attack entry point in...
Cybersecurity & Risk
IBM X-Force 2026: AI-Driven Attacks and Credential Theft Reshape the Threat Landscape
⚡ Key Takeaways The IBM X-Force 2026 Threat Intelligence Index found vulnerability exploitation became the leading attack entry point in...
Cybersecurity & Risk
Session Cookies: Why Defense Is Becoming Hardware-Backed
⚡ Key Takeaways Chrome 146 activated Device Bound Session Credentials on April 9, 2026 for Windows users with TPM 2.0...
Cybersecurity & Risk
Omnistealer: The First Infostealer to Use the Blockchain as Command-and-Control
⚡ Key Takeaways Omnistealer is a newly analyzed infostealer that stores its staging code inside transactions on public blockchains (TRON,...
Cybersecurity & Risk
Browser Extension Security: The Enterprise Blind Spot Attackers Love
⚡ Key Takeaways 53% of enterprise browser extensions hold high or critical risk permissions granting access to cookies, passwords, and...
Cybersecurity & Risk
The Infostealer Epidemic: How Credential Theft at Scale Is Fueling the Cybercrime Economy
Infostealer malware stole 3.9 billion credentials from 4.3 million devices in 2024. Lumma, RedLine, and StealC power a MaaS economy starting at $250/month.