The North Korean hacker group Konni (Opal Sleet, TA406) is using AI-generated PowerShell malware to target developers and engineers in the blockchain sector.
ClickFix uses fake CAPTCHAs and a signed Microsoft App-V script to deploy Amatera stealer on enterprise Windows systems.
North Korean Konni hackers are now targeting blockchain developers and engineers with AI-generated malware.
Not all applications are created with remote execution in mind. PowerShell provides several ways to invoke applications on ...
The North Korean threat group is using a new PowerShell backdoor to compromise development environments and target ...
Drawing on lessons learned from Dragon NaturallySpeaking, this second installment examines where voice-based navigation and dictation in Microsoft Copilot may streamline workflows -- and where ...
The malicious campaign targets software developers and engineering teams with expertise in, or access to, blockchain-related ...
North Korean group Konni uses AI-assisted PowerShell malware and phishing via Google ads and Discord to breach blockchain ...
A new malicious campaign mixes the ClickFix method with fake CAPTCHA and a signed Microsoft Application Virtualization (App-V ...
In PowerShell, the Exit function allows you to terminate or stop a script from running. It's like telling the script to quit ...
Tech companies are getting increasingly pushy with their large language models—prominent buttons for these AI features coat ...
New native integration connects Kafka streams directly to Cosmos DB on Confluent Cloud, reducing complexity for event-driven and cloud-native applications.