LAPSUS$ is causing global amounts of trouble despite the arrests of half a dozen alleged members of the gang and a looming court case.
They're the new kids on the block, and their "extortion and destruction" hacks are swiping gigabytes of sensitive data. Their leader also might be 16.
LAPSUS$, a new cybercriminal gang with serious chutzpah, has been pillaging the tech sector's biggest names for their digital secrets.
After a hacker group claimed to have stolen the conglomerate's data, a company spokesman told Gizmodo that the info had actually been leaked by Nestlé itself.
Spellingbee.com, the website for the Scripps National Spelling Bee, was H-A-C-K-E-D in January.
LAPSUS$ recently published source code for Microsoft's Cortana and Bing.
The software company is currently investigating claims that its internal systems were compromised.
The Russian Ministry says it's facing an "unprecedented" assault by foreign hackers.
The “IT Army of Ukraine” was announced by the country’s vice prime minister, Mykhailo Fedorov, and is organizing on Telegram.
Reports of a hacktivist attack on the railway system in Belarus still have not been confirmed, but that doesn't make them any less fascinating.
As the political crisis in Ukraine deepens, warfare is evolving with the times.
The arrests come at a tense time for the relationship between the U.S. and Russia.
The "malicious USB stick" trick is old but apparently it's still wildly popular with the crooks.
The Justice Department announced Monday that a number of prominent ransomware hackers had been arrested.
Russian cyber-spies used a special technique to hide behind Americans' home and mobile networks while on intelligence missions, a recent report says.
Trump's website was temporarily defaced by a video of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Missouri Gov. Mike Parson claims he wants to legally punish a reporter who tried to alert the state to its bad data practices.
From Colonia Pipeline to SolarWinds to Twitch, cyberattacks are inflicting historic pain worldwide. Here are the biggest cyberattacks this year.
After the Kaseya attack, the feds somehow came into possession of a decryption key but waited nearly a month before delivering it into the hands of businesses.
Back before the dark days of ransomware, hackers still caused a lot of trouble.