This Week in Security News: Senate Hearings and Equifax Breaches

Credit to Author: Jon Clay ((Global Threat Communications)| Date: Fri, 16 Feb 2018 14:00:53 +0000

Welcome to our weekly roundup, where we share what you need to know about the cybersecurity news and events that happened over the past few days. This week, leaders of six security agencies testified before the Senate Intelligence Committee, the Equifax hack grew in severity, and hackers used the power of Machine Learning to spread malware.

Read on to learn more.

 

How Hackers Are Leveraging Machine Learning

As agencies and security professionals continue to dig deeper into machine learning capabilities, hackers are looking toward AI-based processes to boost the effects of cyberattacks. 

Vulnerabilities in Apache CouchDB Open the Door to Monero Miners

Attacks abusing cryptocurrency miners have been on an upswing — in large part due to the growing popularity of digital currencies. 

Lazarus Campaign and LoopX Scam Show That Cryptocurrency Industry Still Fraught With Dangers

The past weeks have seen a slew cryptocurrency-related hacks. More specifically: a new threat actor known as the Lazarus Group, and the other involving a scam by one of the new cryptocurrency startups.

Cybersecurity is ‘greatest concern’ at Senate threats hearing

The leaders of six agencies, including the CIA, the NSA and the FBI, testified before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Tuesday as part of the committee’s annual “Worldwide Threats” hearing.

Driver’s license, credit card numbers: The Equifax hack is way worse than consumers knew

The Equifax data breach exposed more of consumers’ personal information than the company first disclosed last year, according to documents given to lawmakers. 

Russian accused of running Dark Web market nabbed in Thailand

Police in Thailand announced they have arrested a Russian national accused by U.S. authorities of running an online cybercrime marketplace.

Cryptojacking malware discovered running on critical infrastructure control systems

Radiflow reports that they discovered cryptojacking software — malware that mines cryptocurrency — running in the monitoring and control network of an unnamed European water utility.

Did any of these new cybersecurity developments surprise you? Let me know your thoughts below, or follow me on Twitter: @JonLClay.

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