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Coruna Exploit Kit Targets iPhones With 23 Vulnerabilities Across Multiple iOS Versions

  Security researchers have identified a powerful exploit framework targeting Apple iPhones running older versions of the iOS operating syst...

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China Tightens Control Over Official Data Available to the Outside World


 

Early in the Internet's history, the global network architecture was widely recognized as an evolving system for transferring government documents, statistical records, and institutional disclosures across jurisdictions a borderless repository of knowledge that enabled government documents to travel freely across jurisdictions. 

A number of scholars, investors, journalists, and policymakers have become accustomed to considering publicly hosted websites as a reliable window into distant government administration. However, recent observations suggest that the assumption of digital openness in China's online ecosystem may be changing quietly. 

There has been a steady decline in the international accessibility of Chinese government portals over the past few years: more and more official websites that once appeared regularly in global search results cannot be accessed when searching outside the country's boundaries. 

In addition to a broader recalibration of information governance, the emerging pattern is interpreted by analysts as a result of an overall pattern rather than isolated technical disruptions. China's institutional data may also be shaped by these practices, not only by managing the flow of foreign content into the country, but also by how much of it remains public.

Over the past few decades, the internet has facilitated unprecedented accessibility to information, dissolving borders that once restricted public records, statistics, and government disclosures. However, new evidence suggests that this openness may be gradually waning in one of the most influential digital ecosystems in the world.

According to researchers who have examined the accessibility of official Chinese government websites, an increasing number of them are no longer accessible from abroad. Despite the pattern, it does not seem to be isolated technical failures, but rather a subtle architectural shift in Chinese information governance that analysts are increasingly describing: a system that restricts not only what citizens of the country are allowed to observe, but also what the outside world can see about China. 

A detailed analysis conducted in February 2025 indicates these interruptions are not simply a consequence of technical inconsistencies, but rather are the result of deliberate policy restrictions. According to researchers, approximately sixty percent of failed connections to Chinese government portals are a consequence of deliberate policy restrictions, while the remaining cases are attributed to network congestion, legacy infrastructure, or fragmented hosting systems. 

It reverses the logic of Chinese domestic internet controls well known to the public. In contrast to the original system, which limited what users were allowed to view abroad, the new configuration appears to be intended to restrict what audiences outside the country may see regarding China's own administrative, economic, and regulatory landscape. These restrictions are unevenly distributed.

As opposed to a uniform nationwide block of geo-filtering, it is more common to detect clusters of it across specific provinces or prefectures. Due to this, certain municipal or regional data portals remain available to overseas users despite neighboring jurisdictions appearing systematically unreachable from overseas. 

As a consequence of this fragmented pattern, it is increasingly challenging for foreign researchers and analysts to construct consistent datasets, since information availability varies greatly according to the level of administration and technology in place to support government websites.

The tightening of external access has also extended beyond government portals into major commercial information services that have long served as research infrastructure for international observers of China’s economy. 

Several commonly used platforms - such as Qichacha, a corporate registry database, the China National Knowledge Infrastructure academic repository, and Wind - were restricted from allowing foreign connectivity in 2022 and 2023. 

A wide range of multinational companies, consulting firms, and academic institutions used these tools to conduct competitor analysis, regulatory monitoring, and market research within China. As a result of their removal from overseas networks, external stakeholders are significantly limited in the number of verifiable public data they can access. 

In May 2024, another similar episode occurred when the National People’s Congress website temporarily implemented geographical restrictions preventing access to its website from outside mainland China, Hong Kong, Macao, and Taiwan. 

Although the restriction was eventually lifted, the incident illustrated how even the highest legislative information portals of the country can be subject to sudden changes in accessibility without prior notice. It was evident by early 2025 that there was a growing access gap within China's own digital ecosystem as well.

For the phrase "government website" in Chinese, autocompletion suggestions increasingly included queries such as "cannot enter government website" and "cannot open government website." According to the trend, it appears that the issue is not just affecting international analysts, but also Chinese citizens living abroad, overseas scholars, and global business teams seeking official information from abroad. 

Chinese digital governance has been closely linked to what has become known as the Great Firewall, a layered system of network filtering and regulatory oversight designed to limit domestic access to foreign platforms for much of the modern internet era. 

The framework has made a wide range of international services largely inaccessible to mainland China for a number of years, including major technology platforms and a number of prominent global news outlets. 

Some residents have historically used virtual private networks to circumvent these restrictions; however, authorities have repeatedly moved to tighten regulations pertaining to such tools, framing them as potential threats to national security and information sovereignty, resulting in unauthorized circumvention technologies becoming more prevalent. 

Due to the emerging pattern of restricted access to Chinese government websites, this long-established architecture has been markedly inverted. Rather than focusing exclusively on filtering inbound information, new evidence indicates that outward visibility of Chinese public-sector data could also be limited. 

Lennart Brussee conducted a recent technical assessment, compiled from over 13,000 websites operated by governments at all levels of government, to determine the extent and scope of the phenomenon. Researches conducted by the researcher during November were conducted to evaluate their accessibility from more than a dozen locations outside China, using residential proxy infrastructure to simulate standard user connections. 

Several of these official websites were unable to be accessed from overseas networks, according to the results. Despite some failures appearing consistent with routine connectivity problems, there was a significant share of failures that were consistent with intentional filtering.

Approximately one in ten access attempts encountered mechanisms commonly associated with deliberate blocking. These included server-side restrictions and domain name system filtering, preventing foreign queries from properly resolving. 

The findings together indicate that limitations on external access are not limited to isolated platforms but may also occur on administrative websites of all types. As researchers, investors, and policy analysts utilize public government records to track regulatory developments, demographics, and economic indicators, the increasing opacity of these digital sources presents a challenge in interpreting China's rapidly evolving information environment.

It has already been noticed that such restrictions are likely to have long-term consequences among policy researchers studying the long-term consequences of data opacity. It was argued in 2023 that the limiting international access to publicly available Chinese data would undermine informed policy decisions, according to analysts Dewey Murdick and Owen Daniels of Georgetown University's Centre for Security and Emerging Technology.

The authors cautioned that the continued closure of official datasets would lead to a diminished ability to analyze China's political and economic systems based on evidence. They observed that researchers who cannot verify developments through open information can create speculative narratives and reinforce polarized interpretations as a consequence of the resulting vacuum. 

At a time when geopolitical tensions between China and the United States are already shaping global policy debate, this can be especially problematic. A decline in public data access, they claim, may unintentionally contribute to policy miscalculations, such as poor economic decoupling strategies or protectionist responses that are based primarily on uncertainty rather than verifiable evidence. 

There are broader implications beyond academic research. It has been suggested by Brussee that selective geoblocking of government resources could adversely affect people-to-people exchanges and complicate foreign companies’ attempts to interpret regulatory signals, market conditions, and administrative guidance from official sources. 

As an essential layer of informational infrastructure for international firms operating in or studying the Chinese market, publicly accessible government portals have long been an integral part of this process. In response, reduced accessibility may result in a greater reliance on secondary interpretations rather than direct examination of primary data. 

Nevertheless, the researchers warn against the implication that the phenomenon is unique to Chinese culture. In recent years, governments across several jurisdictions, including the United States and Russia, have explored ways of limiting the exposure of certain domestic information systems to the outside world. In Chinese territory, geo-blocking does not appear to be uniformly distributed. 

The restrictions, however, tend to occur in clusters at the provincial or prefectural administrative level, which suggests that local authorities may be implementing technical controls in response to national policy signals at the same time. 

Consequently, researchers have described the process as a gradual experiment in institutional design. There appears to be a wide range of technical approaches adopted by different agencies and regional governments, potentially evaluating the effectiveness of external access controls before deciding whether to expand them more widely. 

Observers point out that China's approach to digital governance has historically influenced internet management practices beyond its borders, suggesting that such experimentation could suggest the development of a more comprehensive data governance strategy.

The development of network filtering systems by countries such as Russia, Uganda, and Myanmar has often been based on elements of Chinese experience, sometimes accompanied by technical guidance.

LexisNexis Confirms Data Breach After Hackers Exploit Unpatched React App

 

A breach at LexisNexis Legal & Professional exposed some customer and business data, the firm confirmed. News surfaced after FulcrumSec claimed responsibility and leaked about two gigabytes of files on underground platforms. Hackers accessed parts of the company’s systems, though the breach scope was limited. The American analytics provider confirmed the incident days later, stating only a small portion of its infrastructure was affected. 

The company said an outside actor gained access to a limited number of servers. LexisNexis Legal & Professional provides legal research, regulatory information, and analytics tools to lawyers, corporations, government agencies, and universities in more than 150 countries. According to the firm, most of the accessed information came from older systems and was not considered sensitive, which reduced the potential impact.  

Internal findings showed that much of the exposed data originated from legacy systems storing information created before 2020. Records included customer names, user IDs, and business contact details. Some files contained product usage information and logs from past support tickets, including IP addresses from survey responses. However, sensitive personal identifiers such as Social Security numbers or driver’s license data were not included. Financial information, active passwords, search queries, and confidential client case data were also not part of the compromised dataset. 

The breach reportedly occurred around February 24 after attackers exploited the React2Shell vulnerability in an outdated front-end application built with React. The flaw allowed entry into cloud resources hosted on Amazon Web Services before it was addressed. 

While LexisNexis described the affected systems as containing mostly obsolete data, FulcrumSec claimed the intrusion was broader. The group said it extracted about 2.04GB of structured data from the company’s cloud infrastructure, including numerous database tables, millions of records, and internal system configurations. According to the attacker, the breach exposed more than 21,000 customer accounts and information linked to over 400,000 cloud user profiles, including names, email addresses, phone numbers, and job roles. 

Some of the records reportedly belonged to individuals with .gov email addresses, including U.S. government employees, federal judges and law clerks, Department of Justice attorneys, and staff connected to the Securities and Exchange Commission. FulcrumSec also criticized the company’s cloud security setup, alleging that a single ECS task role had access to numerous stored secrets, including credentials linked to production databases. The group said it attempted to contact the company but claimed no cooperation occurred. 

LexisNexis stated that the breach has been contained and confirmed that its products and customer-facing services were not affected. The company notified law enforcement and engaged external cybersecurity experts to assist with investigation and response. Customers, both current and former, have also been informed about the incident. The company had disclosed another breach last year after a compromised corporate account exposed data belonging to roughly 364,000 customers. 

The latest case highlights how vulnerabilities in cloud applications and outdated software can expose enterprise systems even when they contain primarily legacy information.

Too Much Data Regulation Can Create Security Risks


Bitcoin transactions are transparent by design, they work as a pseudonym where operations are visible but identity is hidden. But the increasing amount of identity-based data around users is affecting the transparency into a personal security threat. 

The problem 

The increasing regulatory data collection is now mixing with bitcoin’s on-chain transparency, making a trove of identity linked data that hackers can abuse for forced, real-world attacks. 

What makes data a target? 

Physical attacks against cryptocurrency holders are on the rise due to a number of factors, including social engineering, frequent major data breaches, KYC requirements, and regulatory data collection. 

These occurrences, which are frequently referred to as "wrench attacks," entail coercion to gain private keys or force transactions by threats or physical violence. With France emerging as a focus point, this movement is highlighting a weakness in the industry's regulation.

Threats has become the rule rather than the exception, with at least 47.2% of cases involving verified torture or physical assault and 51.5% including firearms. There were 19 fatal occurrences, which resulted in 24 deaths overall and a 6.2% fatality rate. 2025 was the most violent year on record in terms of recorded cases, but analysts warn that the actual number of occurrences is probably greater because of underreporting. All numbers are based on cases that were publicly available at the time of reporting.

What are the risks?

The risk profile for Bitcoin holders is very harsh. Transactions are irreversible once private keys are turned over under duress. Chargebacks, account freezes, and institutional recovery procedures are nonexistent. When coupled with actual compulsion, the protocol's famed finality becomes a liability. 

France serves as an example of how rapidly this risk might increase. In France, there were twenty bitcoin-related physical attacks in 2025, compared to a total of just four between 2017 and 2024. Eight more cases had already been reported by early February 2026, indicating that the rise is continuing rather than leveling down. Europe now accounts for around 40% of all events worldwide, up from about 22% in 2024.

Chinese AI App Seedance Ignites Hollywood Copyright Panic

 

A groundbreaking Chinese AI app called Seedance 2.0, developed by ByteDance—the company behind TikTok—has ignited both excitement and alarm in Hollywood. Capable of generating cinema-quality videos complete with audio, dialogue, and ultra-realistic visuals from simple text prompts, the tool has produced viral clips featuring iconic characters like Deadpool, Spider-Man, and Darth Vader in entirely new scenarios. These hyper-realistic videos, including fight scenes with Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt or alternate endings to films like Titanic, showcase the app's prowess in mimicking human creativity without traditional production tools.

The rapid spread of these clips on social media has amplified Seedance's reach, drawing millions of views and sparking widespread discussion about AI's creative potential. Users have recreated scenes from popular franchises like The Lord of the Rings, Seinfeld, Avengers, and Breaking Bad, demonstrating the app's versatility across genres from action to sci-fi. ByteDance promotes Seedance as delivering an "ultra-realistic immersive experience," positioning it at the frontier of global AI innovation, particularly from China. This capability extends to low-budget filmmakers, enabling ambitious productions like period dramas or effects-heavy blockbusters that were previously cost-prohibitive.

However, Hollywood's panic stems from blatant copyright infringement embedded in these demonstrations. Studios like Disney and Paramount have issued cease-and-desist letters, demanding Seedance stop using their intellectual property, while Japan's regulators probe ByteDance over anime character videos. The Motion Picture Association condemned the app for "unauthorized use of U.S. copyrighted works on a massive scale," arguing it disregards laws protecting creators and threatens millions of jobs. Even Deadpool writer Rhett Reese voiced despair, lamenting, "I hate to say it. It's over for us."

Industry groups have mobilized swiftly against Seedance 2.0. The Human Artistry Campaign, backed by Hollywood unions, labeled it "an assault on every creator globally," decrying the theft of human work to fuel AI substitutes. SAG-AFTRA echoed this, standing with studios in condemning the "blatant infringement" enabled by ByteDance.Critics warn that without ethical safeguards, such tools prioritize technological advancement over compensation for data used in training, echoing past controversies like OpenAI's Sora. 

As AI blurs lines between innovation and exploitation, Seedance underscores urgent debates on regulation and artist rights. While it empowers creators in emerging markets, Hollywood fears a future where deepfakes erode authenticity and livelihoods. Experts urge balanced policies to harness AI's promise without undermining cultural industries. The app's fallout may catalyze global standards, ensuring technology serves rather than supplants human ingenuity.

Fake FileZilla Website Distributes Malware-Infected Download

 



A fraudulent website is distributing a modified portable edition of FileZilla version 3.69.5 that contains embedded malware. The archive appears legitimate and includes the authentic open-source FTP client, but attackers inserted one additional file, a rogue dynamic-link library named version.dll, before repackaging and circulating it online.

When users download this altered ZIP file, extract it, and launch filezilla.exe, Windows follows its standard DLL loading order. The operating system checks the application’s own directory before referencing system libraries stored in C:\Windows\System32. Because the malicious version.dll is placed inside the FileZilla folder, Windows loads it first. From that moment, the malicious code executes within the legitimate FileZilla process.

This method relies on a long-established Windows behavior known as DLL search order hijacking. It does not involve a vulnerability in FileZilla itself. Instead, the compromise depends on users downloading the installer from an unofficial domain such as filezilla-project[.]live, which imitates the legitimate project site. The attack spreads through deception, including lookalike domains and search engine manipulation, rather than automated self-propagation.


Archive Examination Reveals a Single Suspicious File

The compromised archive contains 918 files. Among them, 917 entries show a last-modified date of 2025-11-12, consistent with the authentic portable release of FileZilla 3.69.5. One file differs: version.dll carries a timestamp of 2026-02-03, nearly three months newer than the rest.

A genuine portable distribution of FileZilla does not include version.dll. Legitimate libraries in the package typically include files such as libfilezilla-50.dll and libfzclient-private-3-69-5.dll. The Windows Version API library normally resides inside the operating system directory and has no reason to be bundled with FileZilla. Its inclusion forms the basis of the compromise.


The SHA-256 hash of the trojanized archive is:

665cca285680df321b63ad5106b167db9169afe30c17d349d80682837edcc755

The SHA-256 hash of the malicious version.dll is:

e4c6f8ee8c946c6bd7873274e6ed9e41dec97e05890fa99c73f4309b60fd3da4


Execution Behavior Observed on a Live System

Monitoring the application with Process Monitor confirms the sideloading sequence. When filezilla.exe starts, Windows attempts to load required libraries. For files such as IPHLPAPI.DLL and POWRPROF.dll, the application directory does not contain a copy, producing “NAME NOT FOUND.” Windows then retrieves legitimate versions from the system directory.

For version.dll, however, the malicious copy is present locally. Windows maps it into memory without consulting System32. The attacker’s code now operates inside the trusted application process.

Approximately 17 milliseconds after loading, the malicious DLL attempts to locate version_original.dll in the same directory. The lookup fails. This pattern suggests DLL proxying, where attackers forward legitimate function calls to a renamed original library to preserve application stability. In this case, the renamed library was not included, which may explain abrupt application termination during testing.

FileZilla invokes LoadLibrary using only the file name rather than a full system path. While common in Windows software design, this practice enables directory-based DLL substitution.


Anti-Analysis Checks and Network Communication

Before activating its main payload, the DLL performs environmental checks. These include BIOS version inspection, system manufacturer queries, probing for VirtualBox registry keys, disk enumeration, memory allocation using write-watch techniques, and delayed execution loops. These checks aim to detect virtual machines or sandbox environments.

If the system appears genuine, the malware initiates encrypted domain resolution using DNS-over-HTTPS. It sends the following request to Cloudflare’s public resolver:

https://1.1.1.1/dns-query?name=welcome.supp0v3[.]com&type=A

Using HTTPS for DNS queries prevents traditional monitoring systems that rely on port 53 inspection from detecting the request.

After resolving the domain, the malware contacts:

https://welcome.supp0v3.com/d/callback?utm_tag=tbs2&utm_source=dll

Memory inspection revealed the embedded configuration:

{ "tag":"tbs", "referrer":"dll", "callback":"https://welcome.supp0v3.com/d/callback?utm_tag=tbs2&utm_source=dll" }

The UTM-style parameters suggest structured tracking of distribution channels.

The malware also attempts connections to 95.216.51[.]236 over TCP port 31415, a non-standard port. Ten connection attempts were recorded across two sessions, indicating retry logic designed to maintain communication.


Additional Capabilities Identified

Automated behavioral analysis indicated potential FTP credential harvesting. Because FileZilla stores connection details locally, unauthorized access could expose remote servers and hosting accounts. Other flagged behaviors included:

• Creation of suspended processes with memory injection

• Runtime .NET compilation using csc.exe

• Registry modifications consistent with persistence mechanisms

• Calls to Windows encryption-related APIs

These behaviors indicate functionality beyond simple credential theft, potentially including persistence and process manipulation.


Defensive Guidance

Users should download FileZilla exclusively from the official domain filezilla-project.org and verify the published hash values before execution. Portable installations should not contain version.dll. Its presence signals compromise.

Monitor outbound HTTPS traffic to public DNS resolvers such as 1.1.1.1 or 8.8.8.8 from non-browser applications. Review ZIP archive timestamps for inconsistencies before running software. Block the identified domains and IP address at the network perimeter if detected.

Malwarebytes reports detection and blocking of known variants of this threat.


Indicators of Compromise (IOCs)

• SHA-256 Hashes

665cca285680df321b63ad5106b167db9169afe30c17d349d80682837edcc755    FileZilla_3.69.5_win64.zip

e4c6f8ee8c946c6bd7873274e6ed9e41dec97e05890fa99c73f4309b60fd3da4 — version.dll

• Domains

filezilla-project[.]live

welcome.supp0v3[.]com

• Network Indicator

95.216.51[.]236:31415


University of Hawaiʻi Cancer Center Suffers Data Breach from Ransomware Attacks


A ransomware attack on the University of Hawaii Cancer Center's epidemiology division last year resulted in information leaks for up to 1.2 million people. 

About the incident

According to a statement issued by the organization last week, hackers gained access to documents that included 1998 voter registration records from the City and County of Honolulu, as well as Social Security numbers (SSNs) and driver's license numbers gathered from the Hawaiʻi State Department of Transportation. 

A 1993 Multiethnic Cohort (MEC) Study was shown to be partially responsible for the breach. The institution recruited study participants using voter registration information and driver's license numbers. Health information was included in some of the files that were made public.

Leaked information

Files related to three other epidemiological studies of diet and cancer were retrieved, along with data on MEC Study participants. To determine whether further sensitive data was obtained, the hack is still being investigated. According to the university, "additional individuals whose personal information may have been included in the historical driver's license and voter registration records with SSN identifiers number approximately 1.15 million." 

A total of 87,493 study participants had their information taken. The cyber problem was initially found on August 31, 2025, according to a report the university gave to the state assembly in January.

Attack discovery

The stolen data was found in a subset of research files on specific servers supporting the epidemiological research activities of the University of Hawaii Cancer Center. The University of Hawaii Cancer Center's clinical trials activities, patient care, and other divisions were unaffected by the ransomware attack. The University of Hawaii Cancer Center's director, Naoto Ueno, expressed regret for the incident last week and stated that the organization was "committed to transparency." 

According to the institution, in order to address the issue, they hired cybersecurity specialists and notified law enforcement after the attackers encrypted and probably stole data. The cybersecurity company acquired "an affirmation that any information obtained was destroyed" and a decryption tool.

Three universities, seven community colleges, one employment training center, and numerous research institutions dispersed over six islands make up the University of Hawaii system. About 50,000 students are served by it.

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