Russian organizations have been targeted as part of an ongoing campaign that delivers a previously undocumented Windows spyware called Batavia.
The activity, per cybersecurity vendor Kaspersky, has been active since July 2024.
“The targeted attack begins with bait emails containing malicious links, sent under the pretext of signing a contract,” the Russian company said. “The main goal of the Russian organizations have been targeted as part of an ongoing campaign that delivers a previously undocumented Windows spyware called Batavia.
The activity, per cybersecurity vendor Kaspersky, has been active since July 2024.
“The targeted attack begins with bait emails containing malicious links, sent under the pretext of signing a contract,” the Russian company said. “The main goal of the
- Hackers ‘Shellter’ Various Stealers in Red Team Tool to Evade Detection darkreadingElizabeth Montalbano, Contributing Writer
- 4 Critical Steps in Advance of 47-Day SSL/TLS Certificates darkreadingTim Callan
- Malicious Pull Request Targets 6,000+ Developers via Vulnerable Ethcode VS Code Extension The Hacker [email protected] (The Hacker News)
- Checking for Fraud: Texas Community Bank Nips Check Fraud in the Bud darkreadingKaren D. Schwartz, Contributing Writer
- CISA Releases One Industrial Control Systems Advisory AlertsCISA
- The Beginner’s Guide to Using AI: 5 Easy Ways to Get Started (Without Accidentally Summoning Skynet)by Tech Jacks
- Tips and Tricks to Enhance Your Incident Response Proceduresby Tech Jacks
- Building a Security Roadmap for Your Company: Strategic Precision for Modern Enterprises by Tech Jacks
- The Power of Policy: How Creating Strong Standard Operating Procedures Expedites Security Initiativesby Tech Jacks
- Building a Future-Proof SOC: Strategies for CISOs and Infosec Leaders by Tech Jacks
- Security Gate Keeping – Annoying – Unhelpfulby Tech Jacks
- The Beginner’s Guide to Using AI: 5 Easy Ways to Get Started (Without Accidentally Summoning Skynet)
Leave A Reply