Microsoft says it’s only going to get worse: It’s seen state-sponsored and cyber-criminal attackers probing systems for the Log4Shell flaw through the end of December. No surprise here: The holidays ...
Hackers could take control of millions of servers, shutting them down or forcing them to spew malware due to widely-used faulty code. Here's how it happened, and what can you do to protect yourself.
Are you tired of hearing about Log4shell yet? Well settle in, because a top-3-worst-security-exploit-ever doesn't vanish overnight. Microsoft updated its article about the flaw (which we mentioned on ...
Outside of the ransomware space, Iranian hacking group APT 35 has attempted to exploit the Log4j flaw against seven targets in the Israeli government and business sector over the past day, Check Point ...
Last weekend was a bad time to be a server administrator. A critical vulnerability emerged in Apache Log4j2. The big problem? Attackers have the chance to exploit the open-source Java package that all ...
In the case of Log4j, we’ve not seeing any drop-offs, but rather scans and exploit attempts from a globally distributed infrastructure on a daily basis. We expect this high degree of activity to ...
More than 1.8 million attacks, against half of all corporate networks, have already launched to exploit Log4Shell. Call it a “logjam” of threats: Attackers including nation-state actors have already ...
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