A week in security (September 23 – September 29)
Last week on Malwarebytes Labs:
- Millions of Kia vehicles were vulnerable to remote attacks with just a license plate number
- Privacy watchdog files complaint over Firefox quietly enabling its Privacy Preserving Attribution
- Telegram will hand over user details to law enforcement
- Don’t share the viral Instagram Meta AI “legal” post
- Romance scams costlier than ever: 10 percent of victims lose $10,000 or more
- Malwarebytes Personal Data Remover: A new way to help scrub personal data online
- 100 million+ US citizens have records leaked by background check service
- San Francisco’s fight against deepfake porn, with City Attorney David Chiu (Lock and Code S05E20)
- Relationship broken up? Here’s how to separate your online accounts
- SpaceX, CNN, and The White House internal data allegedly published online. Is it real?
Last week on ThreatDown:
- Introducing Detection Center: Centralized threat management simplified
- Hybrid cloud environments are not safe from ransomware
- Android’s Rusty new code shakes off huge number of memory-safe vulnerabilities
- New integration: Nebula and OneView with Google Chronicle SIEM
- North Korean IT workers—or how not to solve the IT staff shortage
Stay safe!
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