Ransomware & Malware

When Your Backup Strategy Becomes Your Biggest Vulnerability

When Your Backup Strategy Becomes Your Biggest Vulnerability

I’ve been watching this week’s security news with a growing sense of unease, and I think we need to have an honest conversation about something that’s becoming painfully clear: our backup and recovery systems are turning into attack vectors faster than we can secure them.

The headlines from this week paint a troubling picture. Veeam just patched four critical RCE vulnerabilities in their Backup & Replication solution, while Stryker’s Iranian cyberattack is forcing us to confront some uncomfortable truths about disaster recovery planning. Add in CISA’s emergency directive about exploited Cisco SD-WAN flaws and a WordPress plugin vulnerability affecting 200,000+ sites, and you’ve got a week that should make every CISO lose some sleep.

AI-Generated Malware and Zero-Click Exploits: This Week's Security Wake-Up Calls

AI-Generated Malware and Zero-Click Exploits: This Week’s Security Wake-Up Calls

I’ve been digging through this week’s security news, and there are some developments that really caught my attention – particularly around how attackers are using AI to create malware and exploiting critical flaws that require zero user interaction. Let me walk you through what’s happening and why it matters for our day-to-day operations.

When AI Becomes the Malware Author

The most unsettling story this week involves a new malware strain called “Slopoly” that appears to have been generated using AI tools. This isn’t just theoretical anymore – we’re seeing real-world ransomware attacks where the initial access malware was likely coded by AI.

AI-Generated Malware Is Here, and Other Security Stories That Should Keep You Awake

AI-Generated Malware Is Here, and Other Security Stories That Should Keep You Awake

Coffee in hand, I’ve been digging through this week’s security news, and there’s one story that really caught my attention—though it’s buried among the usual mix of ransomware attacks and patch releases. We’re officially in the era of AI-generated malware, and it’s not as dramatic as you might expect.

The Slopoly Story: AI Malware Goes Live

The Hacker News reported that cybersecurity researchers have identified what they believe is AI-generated malware called Slopoly, deployed by a threat group named Hive0163. The researchers describe it as “still relatively unspectacular,” which honestly makes it more concerning, not less.

When Nation-States Start Playing Nice with Cybercriminals: What This Week's Security News Really Means

When Nation-States Start Playing Nice with Cybercriminals: What This Week’s Security News Really Means

I’ve been tracking some interesting developments this week that paint a pretty clear picture of where we’re heading in cybersecurity. Let me walk you through what caught my attention and why it matters for those of us defending networks.

Iran’s New Playbook: Why Pretend When You Can Partner?

The biggest story that made me pause was the intelligence coming out about Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS) directly collaborating with cybercriminal groups. This isn’t just another APT report – it represents a fundamental shift in how nation-state actors operate.

Supply Chain Attacks Are Getting More Sophisticated – And We're All Targets

Supply Chain Attacks Are Getting More Sophisticated – And We’re All Targets

I’ve been tracking some concerning developments this week that really highlight how attackers are evolving their tactics. We’re seeing supply chain compromises hitting developers directly, while legitimate websites are being weaponized at scale. Let me break down what’s happening and why it matters for all of us.

PhantomRaven Goes After JavaScript Developers

The most alarming story has to be this new PhantomRaven NPM attack campaign that’s flooding the npm registry with malicious packages. We’re talking about 88 compromised packages specifically designed to steal sensitive data from JavaScript developers.

When Healthcare Meets Hacktivism: Iran-Linked Attack Takes Down Medical Giant Stryker

When Healthcare Meets Hacktivism: Iran-Linked Attack Takes Down Medical Giant Stryker

We’ve seen our share of ransomware hitting healthcare, but yesterday’s attack on Stryker caught my attention for all the wrong reasons. The medical technology giant got hit with wiper malware – not ransomware, but the kind of destructive attack designed to cause maximum damage rather than make money.

Handala, an Iranian-linked hacktivist group, claimed responsibility for taking Stryker offline. What makes this particularly concerning is the shift we’re seeing from financially motivated attacks to politically driven destruction. When hacktivists target medical device manufacturers, they’re not just hitting corporate profits – they’re potentially disrupting patient care and medical procedures that depend on these systems.

When AI Browsers Fall for Phishing and Other Tales from the Security Trenches

When AI Browsers Fall for Phishing and Other Tales from the Security Trenches

I’ve been digging through this week’s security news, and honestly, some of these stories feel like they’re straight out of a cybersecurity thriller. We’ve got AI browsers getting socially engineered, IoT devices with admin access running wild, and a supply chain attack that hit right in the heart of GitHub Actions. Let me walk you through what caught my attention and why these incidents matter for all of us.

When JavaScript Worms Wake Up and Crypto Contractors Go Rogue

When JavaScript Worms Wake Up and Crypto Contractors Go Rogue

You know those moments when you think you’ve seen it all in cybersecurity, and then the universe serves up a fresh reminder that there’s always something new? This week delivered exactly that kind of reality check.

The Great Wikipedia Woodpecker Incident

Let’s start with what might be the most unexpectedly charming security story I’ve encountered in years. A security engineer at Wikipedia was doing routine work when they accidentally triggered a JavaScript worm that had been dormant since 2024. Within minutes, the entire site was plastered with giant woodpecker images.

Sednit's Back With New Toys While Everyone Scrambles to Patch: A Busy Week in Security

Sednit’s Back With New Toys While Everyone Scrambles to Patch: A Busy Week in Security

It’s been one of those weeks where you barely finish reading one security alert before three more land in your inbox. Between Russian threat actors upgrading their arsenals and Google accidentally leaving the door open to cross-tenant data access, there’s a lot to unpack from this week’s developments.

The Return of Sednit (And Why It Matters)

The biggest story catching my attention is Sednit’s resurgence with a sophisticated new toolkit. For those who haven’t been tracking this Russia-affiliated group, they’ve been relatively quiet lately, relying on basic implants that honestly felt almost lazy compared to their earlier work.

Cloud Misconfigurations and Exploit-First Attacks: Why Our Defense Strategies Need an Update

Cloud Misconfigurations and Exploit-First Attacks: Why Our Defense Strategies Need an Update

Coffee break conversations in security teams have gotten more intense lately, and for good reason. This week’s security news tells a story that should make all of us pause and reconsider how we’re approaching cloud security and threat prevention.

The Shift from Stolen Credentials to Direct Exploitation

Let’s start with what might be the most significant trend emerging from recent threat intelligence: attackers are changing their playbook. Google Cloud’s latest report shows a sharp rise in threat actors who prefer exploiting software vulnerabilities over stealing credentials. They’re particularly fond of vulnerabilities like React2Shell, which gives them direct paths into cloud environments without the messy business of credential theft.