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The commission disclosed the attack on March 27, when Bleeping Computer confirmed the breach of the European Union’s primary executive body.
Recently, the European Commission informed CERT-EU about the breach, informing them that their Cybersecurity Operations was not warned about an API exploit, a possible account hack, or any malicious network traffic until March 24.
In March, TeamPCP exploited a compromised AWS API key to manage rights over different Commission AWS accounts (hacked in the Trivy supply-chain breach).
After that, the gang deployed TruffleHog to look for more secrets, then added a new access key to an existing user to escape detection before doing more spying and data theft.
In the past, TeamPCP has been known for supply-chain attacks targeting developer code forums like NPM, Docker, PyPi, and GitHub. The gang also attacked the LiteLLM PyPI package in a campaign that affected tens of thousands of devices via its “TeamPCP Cloud Stealer” data-stealing malware.
Later, data extortion gang ShinyHunters posted the stolen data on their dark web leak site as a 90 GB archive of documents (around 340GB uncompressed), which includes email addresses, contacts, and email information.
According to the CERT-EU analysis, hackers have stolen tens of thousands of documents; the leak affects around 42 internal European Commission clients and around 20 other Union firms.
"The threat actor used the compromised AWS secret to exfiltrate data from the affected cloud environment. The exfiltrated data relates to websites hosted for up to 71 clients of the Europa web hosting service: 42 internal clients of the European Commission, and at least 29 other Union entities,” CERT-EU said. Regarding the dataset, CERT-EU said it also contained “at least 51,992 files related to outbound email communications, totalling 2.22 GB. The majority of these are automated notifications with little to no content. However, 'bounce-back' notifications, which are responses to incoming messages from users, may contain the original user-submitted content, posing a risk of personal data exposure."
No websites were taken offline or altered as a result of this attack, and no lateral movement to other Commission AWS accounts has been found, according to CERT-EU.
Although it would probably take "a considerable amount of time" to analyze the exfiltrated databases and information, the Commission has informed the appropriate data protection authorities and is in direct contact with the impacted organizations.
After learning that a mobile device management platform used to oversee employees' devices had been compromised, the European Commission revealed another data breach in February.
Advanced Micro Devices has revealed plans to acquire long-time rival Intel Corporation, marking a dramatic reversal in one of the most enduring rivalries in the semiconductor industry.
The proposed transaction, structured entirely as a stock-based deal, signals a major shift in industry power. Once viewed as the underdog, AMD has now surpassed Intel in market valuation, and the acquisition would further cement that transition.
For over four decades, the relationship between the two companies has been defined by competition, imitation, legal disputes, and strategic overlap. AMD historically operated in Intel’s shadow, often positioning itself as a secondary supplier while attempting to challenge its dominance. In recent years, however, AMD has strengthened its position across multiple computing segments and improved investor confidence, while Intel has faced setbacks.
Intel’s struggles have included delays in manufacturing advancements, inconsistent product execution, and repeated strategic adjustments. These challenges have contributed to a broader shift in market perception, allowing AMD to close the gap and eventually move ahead in key areas.
The idea of AMD acquiring Intel would have seemed highly unlikely just a few years ago, given Intel’s long-standing dominance as the central force in the personal computing ecosystem. The potential merger now reflects how drastically that balance has changed.
If completed, integrating the two companies could present organizational and cultural challenges, given their long history as direct competitors. Leadership from AMD indicated that the combined entity could accelerate product development timelines, streamline user experience, and maintain a level of internal competition despite operating under one structure.
In its response, Intel stated that the agreement could enhance shareholder value while providing its engineering teams with clearer direction and stronger operational support to rebuild competitive product offerings.
Industry analysts are still assessing the broader implications. Historically, Intel’s scale and manufacturing capabilities positioned it at the center of the computing market, while AMD functioned as a challenger that introduced competitive pressure. That dynamic has shifted as AMD expanded its presence in servers, desktops, and mobile computing, while Intel’s recovery efforts remain ongoing.
Several practical questions remain unresolved. These include how branding will be handled, whether both product lines will continue independently, and how regulators will evaluate the consolidation of two primary x86 architecture competitors under a single entity.
Sources familiar with the matter suggest AMD may adopt a structure that retains both brands in the near term. One internal concept reportedly frames Intel as a legacy-focused division, reflecting its historical significance while redefining its position within the organization.
Investor reaction has ranged from surprise to cautious optimism. Some market participants see the potential for operational efficiency and reduced rivalry, while others are concerned that combining the two companies could limit competition in the x86 processor market.
From a regulatory perspective, the deal is likely to face scrutiny due to the potential concentration of market power. The long-standing competition between AMD and Intel has historically driven innovation and pricing balance, and its reduction could reshape industry dynamics.
The announcement comes at a time when the semiconductor sector is undergoing rapid transformation, driven by demand for artificial intelligence, high-performance computing, and evolving global supply chains. Both companies have been investing heavily in these areas, alongside competitors such as NVIDIA Corporation.
At present, the timeline for completion remains subject to regulatory approvals and further review. While the companies have indicated confidence in moving forward, the scale and implications of the deal mean that its outcome will be closely watched across the industry.
Cybersecurity experts have discovered another incident of the ongoing GlassWorm campaign, which uses a new Zig dropper that's built to secretly compromise all integrated development environments (IDEs) on a developer's system.
The tactic was found in an Open VSX extension called "specstudio.code-wakatime-activity-tracker”, which disguised as WakaTime, a famous tool that calculates the time programmes spend with the IDE. The extension can not be downloaded now.
In previous attacks, GlassWorm used the same native compiled code in extensions. Instead of using the binary as the payload directly, it is deployed as a covert indirection for the visible GlassWorm dropper. It can secretly compromise all other IDEs that may be present in your device.
The recently discovered Microsoft Visual Studio Code (VS Code) extension is a replica (almost).
The extension installs a universal Mach-O binary called "mac.node," if the system is running Apple macOS, and a binary called "win.node" for Windows computers.
These Zig-written compiled shared libraries that load straight into Node's runtime and run outside of the JavaScript sandbox with complete operating system-level access are Node.js native addons.
Finding every IDE on the system that supports VS Code extensions is the binary's main objective once it has been loaded. This includes forks like VSCodium, Positron, and other AI-powered coding tools like Cursor and Windsurf, in addition to Microsoft VS Code and VS Code Insiders.
Once this is achieved, the binary installs an infected VS Code extension (.VSIX) from a hacker-owned GitHub account. The extension, known as “floktokbok.autoimport”, imitates “steoates.autoimport”, an authentic extension with over 5 million downloads on the office Visual Studio Marketplace.
After that, the installed .VSIX file is written to a secondary path and secretly deployed into each IDE via editor's CLI installer.
In the second-stage, VS Code extension works as a dropper that escapes deployment on Russian devices, interacts with the Solana blockchain, gets personal data, and deploys a remote access trojan (RAT). In the final stage, RAT installs a data-stealing Google Chrome extension.
“The campaign has expanded repeatedly since then, compromising hundreds of projects across GitHub, npm, and VS Code, and most recently delivering a persistent RAT through a fake Chrome extension that logged keystrokes and dumped session cookies. The group keeps iterating, and they just made a meaningful jump,” cybersecurity firm aikido reported.