Plus: The FBI dismantles the largest-ever China-backed botnet, the DOJ charges two men with a $243 million crypto theft, ...
The devices undoubtedly were used by the Chinese government to attempt to obtain not only the personally identifiable ...
The Chinese government is running another broad campaign to hack as many American organizations as possible — heightening the ...
The FBI has used a court order to seize control of a network of hundreds of thousands of hacked internet routers and other ...
The Justice Department dismantled a large Chinese-controlled botnet, neutralizing over 200,000 infected devices.
"The government’s malware disabling commands, which interacted with the malware’s native functionality, were extensively ...
The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, in collaboration with other agencies, has disrupted a botnet that consisted of more ...
The Flax Typhoon campaign used malware it put on cameras, video recorders and home and office routers, to create a massive ...
“Flax Typhoon hijacked Internet-of-Things devices like cameras, video recorders and storage devices,” FBI Director ...
Once a user's device is infected as part of an ongoing Flax Typhoon APT campaign, the malware connects it to a botnet called Raptor Train, initiating malicious activity.
The botnet malware infected numerous types of consumer devices, including small-office/home-office (SOHO) routers, internet protocol (IP) cameras, digital video recorders (DVRs), and network-attached ...
FBI Director Chris Wray warned that this is just one round in a larger cyber conflict with Chinese-backed actors.