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Cloud Storage Scam Uses Fake Renewal Notices to Trick Users


Cybercriminals are running a large-scale email scam that falsely claims cloud storage subscriptions have failed. For several months, people across different countries have been receiving repeated messages warning that their photos, files, and entire accounts will soon be restricted or erased due to an alleged payment issue. The volume of these emails has increased sharply, with many users receiving several versions of the same scam in a single day, all tied to the same operation.

Although the wording of each email differs, the underlying tactic remains the same. The messages pressure recipients to act immediately by claiming that a billing problem or storage limit must be fixed right away to avoid losing access to personal data. These emails are sent from unrelated and randomly created domains rather than official service addresses, a common sign of phishing activity.

The subject lines are crafted to trigger panic and curiosity. Many include personal names, email addresses, reference numbers, or specific future dates to appear genuine. The messages state that a renewal attempt failed or a payment method expired, warning that backups may stop working and that photos, videos, documents, and device data could disappear if the issue is not resolved. Fake account numbers, subscription details, and expiry dates are used to strengthen the illusion of legitimacy.

Every email in this campaign contains a link. While the first web address may appear to belong to a well-known cloud hosting platform, it only acts as a temporary relay. Clicking it silently redirects the user to fraudulent websites hosted on changing domains. These pages imitate real cloud dashboards and display cloud-related branding to gain trust. They falsely claim that storage is full and that syncing of photos, contacts, files, and backups has stopped, warning that data will be lost without immediate action.

After clicking forward, users are shown a fake scan that always reports that services such as photo storage, drive space, and email are full. Victims are then offered a short-term discount, presented as a loyalty upgrade with a large price reduction. Instead of leading to a real cloud provider, the buttons redirect users to unrelated sales pages advertising VPNs, obscure security tools, and other subscription products. The final step leads to payment forms designed to collect card details and generate profit for the scammers through affiliate schemes.

Many recipients mistakenly believe these offers will fix a real storage problem and end up paying for unnecessary products. These emails and websites are not official notifications. Real cloud companies do not solve billing problems through storage scans or third-party product promotions. When payments fail, legitimate providers usually restrict extra storage first and provide a grace period before any data removal.

Users should delete such emails without opening links and avoid purchasing anything promoted through them. Any concerns about storage or billing should be checked directly through the official website or app of the cloud service provider.

Former Google Engineer Convicted in U.S. for Stealing AI Trade Secrets to Aid China-Based Startup

 

A former Google software engineer has been found guilty in the United States for unlawfully taking thousands of confidential Google documents to support a technology venture in China, according to an announcement made by the Department of Justice (DoJ) on Thursday.

Linwei Ding, also known as Leon Ding, aged 38, was convicted by a federal jury on 14 charges—seven counts of economic espionage and seven counts of theft of trade secrets. Prosecutors established that Ding illegally copied more than 2,000 internal Google files containing highly sensitive artificial intelligence (AI) trade secrets with the intent of benefiting the People’s Republic of China (PRC).

"Silicon Valley is at the forefront of artificial intelligence innovation, pioneering transformative work that drives economic growth and strengthens our national security," said U.S. Attorney Craig H. Missakian. "We will vigorously protect American intellectual capital from foreign interests that seek to gain an unfair competitive advantage while putting our national security at risk."

Ding was initially indicted in March 2024 after investigators discovered that he had transferred proprietary data from Google’s internal systems to his personal Google Cloud account. The materials allegedly stolen included detailed information on Google’s supercomputing data center architecture used to train and run AI models, its Cluster Management System (CMS), and the AI models and applications operating on that infrastructure.

The misappropriated trade secrets reportedly covered several critical technologies, including the design and functionality of Google’s custom Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) chips and GPU systems, software that enables chip-level communication and task execution, systems that coordinate thousands of chips into AI supercomputers, and SmartNIC technology used for high-speed networking within Google’s AI and cloud platforms.

Authorities stated that the theft occurred over an extended period between May 2022 and April 2023. Ding, who began working at Google in 2019, allegedly maintained undisclosed ties with two China-based technology firms during his employment, one of which was Shanghai Zhisuan Technologies Co., a startup he founded in 2023. Investigators noted that Ding downloaded large volumes of confidential files in December 2023, just days before resigning from the company.

"Around June 2022, Ding was in discussions to be the Chief Technology Officer for an early-stage technology company based in the PRC; by early 2023, Ding was in the process of founding his own technology company in the PRC focused on AI and machine learning and was acting as the company's CEO," the DoJ said.

The case further alleged that Ding attempted to conceal his actions by copying Google source code into the Apple Notes app on his work-issued MacBook, converting the files into PDFs, and uploading them to his personal Google account. Prosecutors also claimed that he asked a colleague to use his access badge to enter a Google facility, creating the false appearance that he was working from the office while he was actually in China.

The investigation reportedly accelerated in late 2023 after Google learned that Ding had delivered a public presentation in China to prospective investors promoting his startup. According to Courthouse News, Ding’s defense attorney Grant Fondo argued that the information could not qualify as trade secrets because it was accessible to a large number of Google employees. "Google chose openness over security," Fonda said.

In a superseding indictment filed in February 2025, Ding was additionally charged with economic espionage, with prosecutors alleging that he applied to a Beijing-backed Shanghai talent program. Such initiatives were described as efforts to recruit overseas researchers to bolster China’s technological and economic development.

"Ding's application for this talent plan stated that he planned to 'help China to have computing power infrastructure capabilities that are on par with the international level,'" the DoJ said. "The evidence at trial also showed that Ding intended to benefit two entities controlled by the government of China by assisting with the development of an AI supercomputer and collaborating on the research and development of custom machine learning chips."

Ding is set to attend a status conference on February 3, 2026. If sentenced to the maximum penalties, he could face up to 10 years in prison for each trade secret theft charge and up to 15 years for each count of economic espionage.

eScan Antivirus Faces Scrutiny After Compromised Update Distribution


MicroWorld Technologies has acknowledged that there was a breach of its update distribution infrastructure due to a compromise of a server that is used to deliver eScan antivirus updates to end users, which was then used to send an unauthorized file to end users. 

It was reported that the incident took place within a narrow two-hour window on January 20, 2026, in a regional update cluster. It affected only a small fraction of customers who had downloaded updates during that period, and was confined to that cluster. 

Following the analysis of the file, it was confirmed that it was malicious, and this demonstrates how even tightly controlled security ecosystems can be compromised when trust mechanisms are attacked. 

Despite MicroWorld reporting that the affected systems were swiftly isolated, rebuilt from clean baselines, and secured through credential rotation and customer remediation within hours of the incident, the episode took place against the backdrop of escalating cyber risks that are continually expanding. 

An unprecedented convergence of high-impact events took place in January 2026, beginning with a major supply chain breach involving a global antivirus vendor, followed by a technical assault against a European power grid, and the revelation of fresh vulnerabilities in artificial intelligence-driven systems in the first few weeks of January 2026. 

There are a number of developments which have led to industry concerns that the traditional division between defensive software and offensive attack surfaces is eroding, forcing organizations to revisit long-standing assumptions about where trust begins and ends in their security architectures as a result. 

According to further technical analysis, eScan's compromised update channel was directly used to deliver the previously unknown malware, effectively weaponizing a trusted distribution channel that had been trusted. 

A report indicated that multiple security platforms detected and blocked attempted attacks associated with the malicious file the day of its distribution, prompting a quick external scrutiny to take place. It was MicroWorld Technologies who indicated to me that the incident was identified internally on January 20 through a combination of monitoring alerts and customer reports, with the affected infrastructure isolated within an hour of being identified. 

The company issued a security advisory the following day, January 21, as soon as the attack was under control and the situation had been stabilised. In spite of the fact that cybersecurity firm Morphisec later revealed that it had alerted eScan during its own investigation, MicroWorld maintains that containment efforts were already underway when the communication took place. 

The company disputes any suggestion that customers were not informed of the changes, claiming proactive notifications and direct outreach as part of the remediation process to address any concerns. 

A malicious update was launched by a file called Reload.exe, which set off a multi-stage infection sequence on the affected systems through the use of a file called Reload.exe. 

The researchers that conducted the initial analysis reported that the executable modified the local HOSTS file to prevent the delivery of corrective updates from eScan update servers and that this led to a number of client machines experiencing update service errors. 

As part of its persistence strategy, the malware created scheduled tasks, such as CorelDefrag, and maintained communication with external command-and-control infrastructure to retrieve additional payloads, in addition to disrupting operations. 

During the infection process, there was also a secondary malicious component called consctlx.exe written to the operating system, which further embedding the threat within the system. A further detail provided by Morphisec, an endpoint security company, provided a deeper technical insight into the underlying mechanism and intent of the malicious update distributed through the trusted infrastructure of eScan. 

As Morphisec stated in its security bulletin, the compromised update package contained a modified version of the eScan update component Reload.exe that was distributed both to enterprise environments and consumer environments via legitimate update channels. 

Despite the binary's appearance of being signed with eScan's code signing certificate, validation checks conducted by Windows and independent analysis platforms revealed that the signature was not valid. Morphisec's analysis revealed that the altered Reload.exe functions as a loader for a malware framework that consists of several stages. This raises concerns about certificate integrity and abuse of trusted signing processes. 

When the component is executed, it establishes persistence on infected machines, executes arbitrary commands, and alters the Windows HOSTS file to prevent access to eScan's update servers, preventing eScan from releasing updates by using routine update mechanisms.

Additionally, the malware started communicating outwards with a distributed command-and-control infrastructure, thus allowing it to download additional payloads from a variety of different domains and IP addresses in order to increase its reach.

According to Morphisec, the final stage of the attack chain involved the deployment of a second executable, CONSCTLX.exe. This secondary executable acted as both a backdoor and a persistent downloader.

A malicious component that was designed to maintain long-term access created scheduled tasks with benign-sounding names like CorelDefrag that were designed to avoid casual inspection while ensuring that the task would execute across restarts as well. 

The company MicroWorld Technologies developed a remediation utility in response to the incident that is specifically intended to identify and reverse unauthorized changes introduced by the malicious update. Using this tool, the company claims that normal update functionality is restored, a successful cleanup has been verified, and the process only requires a standard reboot of the computer to complete. 

Several companies, including eScan and Morphisec, have advised customers to take additional network-level security measures to protect themselves from further malicious communications during the recovery phase of the campaign by blocking the command-and-control endpoints associated with it. 

In addition, the incident has raised concerns about the recurring exploitation of antivirus update mechanisms, which have caused an increase in industry concern. There was an incident of North Korean threat actors exploiting eScan’s update process in 2024 to install backdoors inside corporate networks, illustrating again how security infrastructure remains one of the most attractive targets for state-sponsored attacks, particularly those aiming for high volumes of information. 

As this breach unfolds, it is part of a wider pattern of consequential supply chain incidents that have taken place in early 2026. These incidents range from destructive malware targeting European energy systems to large-scale intellectual property theft coupled with soon-to-appear AI-driven assault tactics. 

The events highlighted by these events also point to a persistent strategic reality in that organizations are increasingly dependent on trusted vendors and automated updates pipelines. If trust is compromised across the digital ecosystem, defensive technologies can become vectors of systemic risk as a result of a compromise in trust. 

In an industry context, the incident is notable for the unusual method of delivery used by the perpetrators. In spite of the fact that software supply chain compromises have been a growing problem over the past few years, malware is still uncommonly deployed through the security product’s own update channel. 

An analysis of the implants involved indicates that a significant amount of preparation has been performed and that the target environment is well known. A successful operation would have required attackers to have acquired access to eScan’s update infrastructure, reverse engineering aspects of its update workflow, and developing custom malware components designed specifically to function within that ecosystem in order to be successful.

Such prerequisites suggest a deliberate, resource-intensive effort rather than a purely opportunistic one. In addition, a technical examination of the implanted components revealed resilience features that were designed to ensure that attacker access would not be impeded under adverse conditions. 

There were multiple fallback execution paths implemented in the malware, so that continuity would be maintained even if individual persistence mechanisms were disrupted. In one instance, the removal of a scheduled task used to launch a PowerShell payload was not sufficient to neutralize the infection, since the CONSCTLX.exe component would also be able to invoke the same functionality. 

Furthermore, blocking the command-and-control infrastructure associated with the PowerShell stage did not completely eliminate an attacker's capabilities, as CONSCTLX.exe retained the ability to deliver shellcode directly to affected systems, as these design choices highlight the importance of operational redundancy, which is one of the hallmarks of well-planned intrusion campaigns. 

In spite of the sophistication evident in the attack's preparation, the attack's impact was mitigated by its relatively short duration and the techniques used in order to prevent the attack from becoming too effective. 

Modern operating systems have an elevated level of trust when it comes to security software, which means that attackers have theoretically the possibility to exploit more intrusive methods, including kernel-mode implants, which provide attackers with an opportunity to carry out more invasive attacks. 

In this case, however, the attackers relied on user-mode components and commonly observed persistence mechanisms, such as scheduled tasks, which constrained the operation's stealth and contributed to its relatively quick detection and containment, according to analysts. 

It is noteworthy that the behavioral indicators included in eScan's advisory closely correspond with those found by Morphisec independently. Both parties deemed the incident to have a medium-to-high impact on the enterprise environments in question. Additionally, this episode has revealed tensions between the disclosures made by vendors and researchers. 

As reported by Bloomberg News, MicroWorld Technologies has publicly challenged parts of Morphisec's public reporting, claiming some of it was inaccurate. It is understood that they are seeking legal advice in response to these claims. 

It was advised by eScan to conduct targeted checks to determine whether the systems were affected from an operational perspective, including reviewing schedule tasks for anomalous entries, inspecting the system HOSTS file for blocked eScan domains, and reviewing update logs from January 20 for irregularities. 

A remediation utility has been released by the company and is available through its technical support channels. This utility is designed to remove malicious components, reverse unauthorized changes, and restore normal update functionality. 

Consequently, customers are advised to block known command-and-control addresses associated with this campaign as a precaution, reinforcing the lesson of the incident: even highly trusted security infrastructure must continually be examined as potential attack surfaces in a rapidly changing threat environment.

New Reprompt URL Attack Exposed and Patched in Microsoft Copilot

 

Security researchers at Varonis have uncovered a new prompt-injection technique targeting Microsoft Copilot, highlighting how a single click could be enough to compromise sensitive user data. The attack method, named Reprompt, abuses the way Copilot and similar generative AI assistants process certain URL parameters, effectively turning a normal-looking link into a vehicle for hidden instructions. While Microsoft has since patched the flaw, the finding underscores how quickly attackers are adapting AI-specific exploitation methods.

Prompt injection attacks work by slipping hidden instructions into content that an AI model is asked to read, such as emails or web pages. Because large language models still struggle to reliably distinguish between data to analyze and commands to execute, they can be tricked into following these embedded prompts. In traditional cases, this might mean white text on a white background or minuscule fonts inside an email that the user then asks the AI to summarize, unknowingly triggering the malicious instructions.

Reprompt takes this concept a step further by moving the injection into the URL itself, specifically into a query parameter labeled “q.” Varonis demonstrated that by appending a long string of detailed instructions to an otherwise legitimate Copilot link, such as “http://copilot.microsoft.com/?q=Hello”, an attacker could cause Copilot to treat that parameter as if the user had typed it directly into the chat box. In testing, this allowed the researchers to exfiltrate sensitive data that the victim had previously shared with the AI, all triggered by a single click on a crafted link.

This behaviour is especially dangerous because many LLM-based tools interpret the q parameter as natural-language input, effectively blurring the line between navigation and instruction. A user might believe they are simply opening Copilot, but in reality they are launching a session already preloaded with hidden commands created by an attacker. Once executed, these instructions could request summaries of confidential conversations, collect personal details, or send data to external endpoints, depending on how tightly the AI is integrated with corporate systems.

After Varonis disclosed the issue, Microsoft moved to close the loophole and block prompt-injection attempts delivered via URLs. According to the researchers, prompt injection through q parameters in Copilot is no longer exploitable in the same way, reducing the immediate risk for end users. Even so, Reprompt serves as a warning that AI interfaces—especially those embedded into browsers, email clients, and productivity suites—must be treated as sensitive attack surfaces, demanding continuous testing and robust safeguards against new injection techniques.

Google Owned Mandiant Finds Vishing Attacks Against SaaS Platforms


Mandiant recently said that it found an increase in threat activity that deploys tradecraft for extortion attacks carried out by a financially gained group ShinyHunters.

  • These attacks use advanced voice phishing (vishing) and fake credential harvesting sites imitating targeted organizations to get illicit access to victims systems by collecting sign-on (SSO) credentials and two factor authentication codes. 
  • The attacks aim to target cloud-based software-as-a-service (SaaS) apps to steal sensitive data and internal communications and blackmail victims. 

Google owned Mandiant’s threat intelligence team is tracking the attacks under various clusters: UNC6661, UNC6671, and UNC6240 (aka ShinyHunters). These gangs might be improving their attack tactics. "While this methodology of targeting identity providers and SaaS platforms is consistent with our prior observations of threat activity preceding ShinyHunters-branded extortion, the breadth of targeted cloud platforms continues to expand as these threat actors seek more sensitive data for extortion," Mandiant said. 

"Further, they appear to be escalating their extortion tactics with recent incidents, including harassment of victim personnel, among other tactics.”

Theft details

UNC6661 was pretending to be IT staff sending employees to credential harvesting links tricking them into multi-factor authentication (MFA) settings. This was found during mid-January 2026.

Threat actors used stolen credentials to register their own device for MFA and further steal data from SaaS platforms. In one incident, the hacker exploited their access to infected email accounts to send more phishing emails to users in cryptocurrency based organizations.

The emails were later deleted to hide the tracks. Experts also found UNC6671 mimicking IT staff to fool victims to steal credentials and MFA login codes on credential harvesting websites since the start of this year. In a few incidents, the hackers got access to Okta accounts. 

UNC6671 leveraged PowerShell to steal sensitive data from OneDrive and SharePoint. 

Attack tactic 

The use of different domain registrars to register the credential harvesting domains (NICENIC for UNC6661 and Tucows for UNC6671) and the fact that an extortion email sent after UNC6671 activity did not overlap with known UNC6240 indicators are the two main differences between UNC6661 and UNC6671. 

This suggests that other groups of people might be participating, highlighting how nebulous these cybercrime organizations are. Furthermore, the targeting of bitcoin companies raises the possibility that the threat actors are searching for other opportunities to make money.

Visual Prompt Injection Attacks Can Hijack Self-Driving Cars and Drones

 

Indirect prompt injection happens when an AI system treats ordinary input as an instruction. This issue has already appeared in cases where bots read prompts hidden inside web pages or PDFs. Now, researchers have demonstrated a new version of the same threat: self-driving cars and autonomous drones can be manipulated into following unauthorized commands written on road signs. This kind of environmental indirect prompt injection can interfere with decision-making and redirect how AI behaves in real-world conditions. 

The potential outcomes are serious. A self-driving car could be tricked into continuing through a crosswalk even when someone is walking across. Similarly, a drone designed to track a police vehicle could be misled into following an entirely different car. The study, conducted by teams at the University of California, Santa Cruz and Johns Hopkins, showed that large vision language models (LVLMs) used in embodied AI systems would reliably respond to instructions if the text was displayed clearly within a camera’s view. 

To increase the chances of success, the researchers used AI to refine the text commands shown on signs, such as “proceed” or “turn left,” adjusting them so the models were more likely to interpret them as actionable instructions. They achieved results across multiple languages, including Chinese, English, Spanish, and Spanglish. Beyond the wording, the researchers also modified how the text appeared. Fonts, colors, and placement were altered to maximize effectiveness. 

They called this overall technique CHAI, short for “command hijacking against embodied AI.” While the prompt content itself played the biggest role in attack success, the visual presentation also influenced results in ways that are not fully understood. Testing was conducted in both virtual and physical environments. Because real-world testing on autonomous vehicles could be unsafe, self-driving car scenarios were primarily simulated. Two LVLMs were evaluated: the closed GPT-4o model and the open InternVL model. 

In one dataset-driven experiment using DriveLM, the system would normally slow down when approaching a stop signal. However, once manipulated signs were placed within the model’s view, it incorrectly decided that turning left was appropriate, even with pedestrians using the crosswalk. The researchers reported an 81.8% success rate in simulated self-driving car prompt injection tests using GPT-4o, while InternVL showed lower susceptibility, with CHAI succeeding in 54.74% of cases. Drone-based tests produced some of the most consistent outcomes. Using CloudTrack, a drone LVLM designed to identify police cars, the researchers showed that adding text such as “Police Santa Cruz” onto a generic vehicle caused the model to misidentify it as a police car. Errors occurred in up to 95.5% of similar scenarios. 

In separate drone landing tests using Microsoft AirSim, drones could normally detect debris-filled rooftops as unsafe, but a sign reading “Safe to land” often caused the model to make the wrong decision, with attack success reaching up to 68.1%. Real-world experiments supported the findings. Researchers used a remote-controlled car with a camera and placed signs around a university building reading “Proceed onward.” 

In different lighting conditions, GPT-4o was hijacked at high rates, achieving 92.5% success when signs were placed on the floor and 87.76% when placed on other cars. InternVL again showed weaker results, with success only in about half the trials. Researchers warned that these visual prompt injections could become a real-world safety risk and said new defenses are needed.

Ivanti Issues Emergency Fixes After Attackers Exploit Critical Flaws in Mobile Management Software




Ivanti has released urgent security updates for two serious vulnerabilities in its Endpoint Manager Mobile (EPMM) platform that were already being abused by attackers before the flaws became public. EPMM is widely used by enterprises to manage and secure mobile devices, which makes exposed servers a high-risk entry point into corporate networks.

The two weaknesses, identified as CVE-2026-1281 and CVE-2026-1340, allow attackers to remotely run commands on vulnerable servers without logging in. Both flaws were assigned near-maximum severity scores because they can give attackers deep control over affected systems. Ivanti confirmed that a small number of customers had already been compromised at the time the issues were disclosed.

This incident reflects a broader pattern of severe security failures affecting enterprise technology vendors in January in recent years. Similar high-impact vulnerabilities have previously forced organizations to urgently patch network security and access control products. The repeated targeting of these platforms shows that attackers focus on systems that provide centralized control over devices and identities.

Ivanti stated that only on-premises EPMM deployments are affected. Its cloud-based mobile management services, other endpoint management products, and environments using Ivanti cloud services with Sentry are not impacted by these flaws.

If attackers exploit these vulnerabilities, they can move within internal networks, change system settings, grant themselves administrative privileges, and access stored information. The exposed data may include basic personal details of administrators and device users, along with device-related information such as phone numbers and location data, depending on how the system is configured.

Ivanti has not provided specific indicators of compromise because only a limited number of confirmed cases are known. However, the company published technical analysis to support investigations. Security teams are advised to review web server logs for unusual requests, particularly those containing command-like input. Exploitation attempts may appear as abnormal activity involving internal application distribution or Android file transfer functions, sometimes producing error responses instead of successful ones. Requests sent to error pages using unexpected methods or parameters should be treated as highly suspicious.

Previous investigations show attackers often maintain access by placing or modifying web shell files on application error pages. Security teams should also watch for unexpected application archive files being added to servers, as these may be used to create remote connections back to attackers. Because EPMM does not normally initiate outbound network traffic, any such activity in firewall logs should be treated as a strong warning sign.

Ivanti advises organizations that detect compromise to restore systems from clean backups or rebuild affected servers before applying updates. Attempting to manually clean infected systems is not recommended. Because these flaws were exploited before patches were released, organizations that had vulnerable EPMM servers exposed to the internet at the time of disclosure should treat those systems as compromised and initiate full incident response procedures rather than relying on patching alone. 

CRIL Uncovers ShadowHS: Fileless Linux Post-Exploitation Framework Built for Stealthy Long-Term Access

 

Operating entirely in system memory, Cyble Research & Intelligence Labs (CRIL) uncovered ShadowHS, a Linux post-exploitation toolkit built for covert persistence after an initial breach. Instead of dropping binaries on disk, it runs filelessly, helping it bypass standard security checks and leaving minimal forensic traces. ShadowHS relies on a weaponized version of hackshell, enabling attackers to maintain long-term remote control through interactive sessions. This fileless approach makes detection harder because many traditional tools focus on scanning stored files rather than memory-resident activity. 

CRIL found that ShadowHS is delivered using an encrypted shell loader that deploys a heavily modified hackshell component. During execution, the loader reconstructs the payload in memory using AES-256-CBC decryption, along with Perl byte skipping routines and gzip decompression. After rebuilding, the payload is executed via /proc//fd/ with a spoofed argv[0], a method designed to avoid leaving artifacts on disk and evade signature-based detection tools. 

Once active, ShadowHS begins with reconnaissance, mapping system defenses and identifying installed security tools. It checks for evidence of prior compromise and keeps background activity intentionally low, allowing operators to selectively activate functions such as credential theft, lateral movement, privilege escalation, cryptomining, and covert data exfiltration. CRIL noted that this behavior reflects disciplined operator tradecraft rather than opportunistic attacks. 

ShadowHS also performs extensive fingerprinting for commercial endpoint tools such as CrowdStrike, Tanium, Sophos, and Microsoft Defender, as well as monitoring agents tied to cloud platforms and industrial control environments. While runtime activity appears restrained, CRIL emphasized the framework contains a wider set of dormant capabilities that can be triggered when needed. 

A key feature highlighted by CRIL is ShadowHS’s stealthy data exfiltration method. Instead of using standard network channels, it leverages user-space tunneling over GSocket, replacing rsync’s default transport to move data through firewalls and restrictive environments. Researchers observed two variants: one using DBus-based tunneling and another using netcat-style GSocket tunnels, both designed to preserve file metadata such as timestamps, permissions, and partial transfer state. 

The framework also includes dormant modules for memory dumping to steal credentials, SSH-based lateral movement and brute-force scanning, and privilege escalation using kernel exploits. Cryptomining support is included through tools such as XMRig, GMiner, and lolMiner. ShadowHS further contains anti-competition routines to detect and terminate rival malware like Rondo and Kinsing, as well as credential-stealing backdoors such as Ebury, while checking kernel integrity and loaded modules to assess whether the host is already compromised or under surveillance.

CRIL concluded that ShadowHS highlights growing challenges in securing Linux environments against fileless threats. Since these attacks avoid disk artifacts, traditional antivirus and file-based detection fall short. Effective defense requires monitoring process behavior, kernel telemetry, and memory-resident activity, focusing on live system behavior rather than static indicators.

Malicious Chrome Extensions Hijack Affiliate Links and Steal ChatGPT Tokens

 

Cybersecurity researchers have uncovered a alarming surge in malicious Google Chrome extensions that hijack affiliate links, steal sensitive data, and siphon OpenAI ChatGPT authentication tokens. These deceptive add-ons, masquerading as handy shopping aids and AI enhancers, infiltrate the Chrome Web Store to exploit user trust. Disguised tools like Amazon Ads Blocker from "10Xprofit" promise ad-free browsing but secretly swap creators' affiliate tags with the developer's own, robbing influencers of commissions across Amazon, AliExpress, Best Buy, Shein, Shopify, and Walmart.

Socket Security identified 29 such extensions in this cluster, uploaded as recently as January 19, 2026, which scan product URLs without user interaction to inject tags like "10xprofit-20." They also scrape product details to attacker servers at "app.10xprofit[.]io" and deploy fake "LIMITED TIME DEAL" countdowns on AliExpress pages to spur impulse buys. Misleading store listings claim mere "small commissions" from coupons, violating policies that demand clear disclosures, user consent for injections, and single-purpose designs.

Broadcom's Symantec separately flagged four data-thieving extensions with over 100,000 installs, including Good Tab, which relays clipboard access to "api.office123456[.]com," and Children Protection, which harvests cookies, injects ads, and executes remote JavaScript. DPS Websafe hijacks searches to malicious sites, while Stock Informer exposes users to an old XSS flaw (CVE-2020-28707). Researchers Yuanjing Guo and Tommy Dong stress caution even with trusted sources, as broad permissions enable unchecked surveillance.

LayerX exposed 16 coordinated "ChatGPT Mods" extensions—downloaded about 900 times—that pose as productivity boosters like voice downloaders and prompt managers. These inject scripts into chatgpt.com to capture session tokens, granting attackers full account access to conversations, metadata, and code. Natalie Zargarov notes this leverages AI tools' high privileges, turning trusted brands into deception vectors amid booming enterprise AI adoption.

Compounding risks, the "Stanley" malware-as-a-service toolkit, sold on Russian forums for $2,000-$6,000, generates note-taking extensions that overlay phishing iframes on bank sites while faking legitimate URLs. Premium buyers get Chrome Store approval guarantees and C2 panels for victim management; it vanished January 27, 2025, post-exposure but may rebrand. Varonis' Daniel Kelley warns browsers are now prime endpoints in BYOD and remote setups.

Users must audit extensions for mismatched features, excessive permissions, and vague disclosures—remove suspects via Chrome settings immediately. Limit installs to verified needs, favoring official apps over third-party tweaks. As e-commerce and AI extensions multiply, proactive vigilance thwarts financial sabotage and data breaches in this evolving browser battlefield.

BadIIS Malware Used in Coordinated Attacks on Asian Web Servers


 

There was an ongoing quiet, methodical campaign unfolding across many sections of the web infrastructure in Asia by the spring of 2025, a campaign which did not rely on loud disruptions or overt destruction, but instead relied on subtle manipulation of trust. 

Cisco Talos researchers have discovered evidence that a Chinese-speaking threat group known as UAT-8099 has been systematically infiltrating vulnerable Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS) servers that hold established credibility within their region's digital eco-systems as a result of ongoing campaign of spam attacks. 

In contrast to targeting any system that could be compromised indiscriminately, the attackers opted for high-reputation servers, leveraging the ranking of such servers to manipulate search engine results and generate illicit revenue rather than targeting every exposed system. 

With a specialized SEO fraud operation, UAT-8099 also combined its manipulation with deeper post-compromised activity by accessing compromised systems with Remote Desktop Protocol access and searching for sensitive certificates, credentials, configuration files, and logs, assets which could be repurposed in follow-on attacks or aquired quietly into underground markets, making it a powerful enterprise.

In this instance, it underscores the persistent threat posed by exposing, internet-facing infrastructure, especially in cases where critical services are exposed, and are vulnerable to compromise. According to Cisco Talos findings, UAT-8099 has demonstrated that it has taken a multifaceted approach to compromising a system, as it does not merely consider susceptible IIS servers to be entry points but also as long-term assets in its criminal workflow as a whole. 

By gaining access to these systems, the group then uses them as a covert way to forward searches in mobile search to spam-driven advertising networks and gambling platforms that are illicit, allowing them to monetize the established credibility of well-known organizations. 

Meanwhile, the attackers harvest sensitive information contained on the servers in a systematic manner, including authentication information as well as internal access records, which may be used for later intrusions or are sold on underground markets in order to maintain control over the servers. 

There are some operations that are common to Chinese-language SEO fraud collectives that exhibit UAT-8099's operational characteristics—and they are similar to the clusters that have been tracked by other security firms such as GhostRedirector and CL-UNK-1037. However, the boundaries between these groups remain indistinct, indicating that financial motivations play an integral role in the evolution of cybercrime.


There is some evidence that indicates that the activity is linked to a Chinese-based threat cluster that has been ongoing since April 2025, with operational evidence indicating that the campaign began in April of that year. The analysis also shows significant parallels with a separate BadIIS attack, identified by WithSecure as WEBJACK by Finnish cybersecurity firm WithSecure, which includes similar tooling, command-and-control infrastructures, and patterns in victim selection.

Cisco Talos has observed a significant increase in activity against IIS servers located in India, Pakistan, Thailand, Vietnam, and Japan during the recent wave of activity. In particular, Cisco Talos has noted an increase in targeting in Thailand and Vietnam. This geographic focus reflects a broader refinement in the group's targeting strategy, which is why the attackers prioritize regions where compromised servers can be exploited in order to monetize and maintain long-term control. 

The Talos researchers have noted that UAT-8099 has shown a significant evolution in terms of its tradecraft from a technical perspective. The group is still relying on web shells and network utilities like SoftEther VPN and EasyTier to maintain access to infected servers, but it has increasingly incorporated red team frameworks and legitimate administrative tools in order to reduce its footprint and extend its longevity. 

An initial attack typically involves exploiting vulnerabilities within IIS environments or misconfigured file upload mechanisms to gain access to the host system. Once the attackers have embedded themselves within the host system, they conduct reconnaissance in order to profile it, create concealed user accounts to establish persistence, and set up utilities aimed at suppressing forensic visibility, disabling defensive controls, and facilitating remote control of the system.

This attack ensures uninterrupted operation of the SEO fraud infrastructure by dynamically adjusting the persistence mechanisms to counter detection measures that flag previously used account names. As a result, attackers create alternative hidden accounts to ensure their persistence mechanisms are constantly adjusted. 

BadIIS malware represents the last stage of the attack chain, and variants have been observed that have been specifically tailored for regional audiences. A strain of the virus was specifically developed to target systems in Vietnam, while another strain of the virus was designed specifically for Thai-based environments or users who speak the Thai language.

It intercepts and evaluates inbound web traffic, identifies search engine crawlers, and covertly redirects them to fraudulent SEO sites despite these customizations. By injecting malicious scripts into server responses, the malware manipulates server responses for ordinary users, particularly those whose browser language settings match the targeted region. 

There is a twin-path approach to this operation, which enables them to quietly manipulate search rankings without the risk of being discovered by legitimate visitors, increasing the significance of the group's emphasis on stealth and sustained exploitation as a result. 

Despite its importance as a foundational component of web infrastructure for organizations across sectors, Microsoft Internet Information Services remains one of the most easily abused components of the Internet.

When the security controls on the IIS environment are not adequate, it is an easy target for abuse. Threat actors have proven that compromised IIS environments can be repurposed to deliver malicious or misleading content to unwitting visitors, effectively turning trusted websites into distribution points for criminals. 

There have been recent examples in which newly observed malware variants were primarily used to promote online gambling content, although security experts caution that this technique is easily capable of being applied to large-scale malware delivery or carefully crafted watering hole attacks that target specific audiences as well. 

It is worth emphasizing that unsecured web servers that retain outward signs of legitimacy pose a broader risk than simply adapting to these methods. In addition to technical disruption, the consequences of a misuse of a reputable website can have long-term consequences for organizations affected. 

A misuse of a reputable website can lead to a loss of user confidence, erode reputations, and expose site owners to a variety of legal and regulatory scrutiny, especially when they are found to have a role in malicious activity. Those who work in the field of cybersecurity emphasize the importance of disciplined server management as well as proactive defense measures in order to reduce such risks. '

Among the key tasks that must be accomplished is maintaining a clear inventory of internet-facing assets, applying security updates on a timely basis, and closely monitoring the IIS environments for irregular modules installed or binaries placed in unanticipated locations. 

An attacker's ability to operate undetected can be further hindered if additional safeguards are put in place, such as limiting administrative access, enforcing strong authentication mechanisms backed by multifactor authentication, and regulating inbound and outbound traffic using firewalls. 

It remains important to perform continuous log analysis in order to minimize the attack surface of IIS deployments while maintaining their integrity. It is clear that UAT-8099's activities have a major impact on the stolen sensitive data from compromised environments, both immediately and tangiblely. 

Once access has been secured, this group reinforces its foothold by deploying additional backdoors, as well as commercial-grade post-exploitation frameworks, and they proceed to collect credentials, configuration files, and digital certificates that are used to support additional intrusions or that can be monetized through underground channels in order to strengthen its foothold. 

The secondary layer of exploitation aims to exploit vulnerable IIS servers to create staging points for larger campaigns, extending the risk much further than the initial compromise, and increasing the value of the targeted systems as a result. However, much of the group’s activity remains largely unknown both to the affected organizations as well as to the users of the website, making detection and response a challenging task. 

There is a tendency for site owners to dismiss external warnings as false positives since the integrity and outward appearance of compromised websites usually remain the same, and it is believed that no visible changes equate to the lack of intrusion on the compromised website. 

The perception gap, according to practitioners in threat intelligence, is often at the core of remediation efforts, despite attempts at the national and sectorion levels of alerting organizations to covert compromises. In spite of the fact that the immediate effects may seem abstract or low priority, experts warn that the underlying vulnerabilities that are being exploited are anything but benign. 

In the same way that hackers can silently manipulate content or insert hidden redirects by utilizing the same weaknesses, malicious scripts can also be injected into a system that will harvest session cookies, login credentials, and payment information from legitimate users, putting organizations at greater risk than they ever imagined.

It was revealed by an analysis of the latest BadIIS variants that they were designed in a modular way that supported a variety of operational modes while remaining undetected. As the malware is working in proxy mode, it validates the request paths and decodes an embedded command-and-control address. This address is used by the malware as an intermediary for fetching content from secondary infrastructure, which is then relayed back through the Internet Information System. 

It is important to note that the responses submitted to search engines are modified before they are routed. This is done to simulate legitimate HTTP traffic with content being injected directly into the bodies of response via native IIS APIs, ensuring seamless delivery without affecting the server itself. 

Additionally, the malware's SEO fraud capability relies on large-scale backlink manipulation: exploiting compromised servers, it displays search engines with HTML-based link structures intended to artificially inflate rankings for attacker-controlled domains, thereby attempting to fool search engines into believing users are the owner of the site. 

There is also an injector mode that enables users tasked with searching for the answer to a search query, retrieved JavaScript from remote servers and embedded in web responses to trigger covert redirections, which can be used with this approach. When operators host redirect logic externally instead of within the malware itself, they have the option of switching destinations, localizing messages by region, and evading signature-based defenses. 

Additionally, a second cluster of BadIIS samples enhances these capabilities by implementing additional request-handling mechanisms to enforce redirects at multiple stages of the HTTP lifecycle and supporting a variety of hijacking scenarios ranging from a complete site replacement to selective homepage redirection or path-based proxying, as well as providing different levels of functionality. 

All these features are taken together to demonstrate a mature, adaptable framework, capable of manipulating search ecosystems as well as exploiting trust web infrastructure for long-term abuse without being visible to victims or their families. It's important to mention that security experts caution that this campaign highlights what is arguably one of the most serious risks facing organizations that use internet-facing web infrastructure to function. 

There is a possibility that IIS servers, which have not been properly hardened, will gradually become long-term assets for cybercriminal operations without causing immediate operational alarms when left unhardened. 

As a result, organizations should reassess their web environments' security posture, and to treat reputation and visibility as potential risks, rather than as safeguards, as they might be. There is an increasing need for proactive patch management, strict access controls, continuous monitoring, and regular integrity checks, which are regarded not as best practices but as a fundamental requirement. 

Campaigns such as UAT-8099 show us that despite the absence of visible disruption, compromise is still a threat, and organizations and their users may suffer far more severe outcomes if they fail to address these silent threats in the future.

Exposed Admin Dashboard in AI Toy Put Children’s Data and Conversations at Risk

 

A routine investigation by a security researcher into an AI-powered toy revealed a serious security lapse that could have exposed sensitive information belonging to children and their families.

The issue came to light when security researcher Joseph Thacker examined an AI toy owned by a neighbor. In a blog post, Thacker described how he and fellow researcher Joel Margolis uncovered an unsecured admin interface linked to the Bondu AI toy.

Margolis identified a suspicious domain—console.bondu.com—referenced in the Content Security Policy headers of the toy’s mobile app backend. On visiting the domain, he found a simple option labeled “Login with Google.”

“By itself, there’s nothing weird about that as it was probably just a parent portal,” Thacker wrote. Instead, logging in granted access to Bondu’s core administrative dashboard.

“We had just logged into their admin dashboard despite [not] having any special accounts or affiliations with Bondu themselves,” Thacker said.

AI Toy Admin Panel Exposed Children’s Conversations

Further analysis of the dashboard showed that the researchers had unrestricted visibility into “Every conversation transcript that any child has had with the toy,” spanning “tens of thousands of sessions.” The exposed panel also included extensive personal details about children and their households, such as:
  • Child’s name and date of birth
  • Names of family members
  • Preferences, likes, and dislikes
  • Parent-defined developmental objectives
  • The custom name assigned to the toy
  • Historical conversations used to provide context to the language model
  • Device-level data including IP-based location, battery status, and activity state
  • Controls to reboot devices and push firmware updates
The researchers also observed that the system relies on OpenAI GPT-5 and Google Gemini. “Somehow, someway, the toy gets fed a prompt from the backend that contains the child profile information and previous conversations as context,” Thacker wrote. “As far as we can tell, the data that is being collected is actually disclosed within their privacy policy, but I doubt most people realize this unless they go and read it (which most people don’t do nowadays).”

Beyond the authentication flaw, the team identified an Insecure Direct Object Reference (IDOR) vulnerability in the API. This weakness “allowed us to retrieve any child’s profile data by simply guessing their ID.”

“This was all available to anyone with a Google account,” Thacker said. “Naturally we didn’t access nor store any data beyond what was required to validate the vulnerability in order to responsibly disclose it.”

Bondu Responds Within Minutes

Margolis contacted Bondu’s CEO via LinkedIn over the weekend, prompting the company to disable access to the exposed console “within 10 minutes.”

“Overall we were happy to see how the Bondu team reacted to this report; they took the issue seriously, addressed our findings promptly, and had a good collaborative response with us as security researchers,” Thacker said.

Bondu also initiated a broader security review, searched for additional vulnerabilities, and launched a bug bounty program. After reviewing console access logs, the company stated that no unauthorized parties had accessed the system aside from the researchers, preventing what could have become a data breach.

Despite the swift and responsible response, the incident changed Thacker’s perspective on AI-driven toys.

“To be honest, Bondu was totally something I would have been prone to buy for my kids before this finding,” he wrote. “However this vulnerability shifted my stance on smart toys, and even smart devices in general.”

“AI models are effectively a curated, bottled-up access to all the information on the internet,” he added. “And the internet can be a scary place. I’m not sure handing that type of access to our kids is a good idea.”

He further noted that, beyond data security concerns, AI introduces new risks at home. “AI makes this problem even more interesting because the designer (or just the AI model itself) can have actual ‘control’ of something in your house. And I think that is even more terrifying than anything else that has existed yet,” he said.

Bondu’s website maintains that the toy was designed with safety as a priority, stating that its “safety and behavior systems were built over 18 months of beta testing with thousands of families. Thanks to rigorous review processes and continuous monitoring, we did not receive a single report of unsafe or inappropriate behavior from bondu throughout the entire beta period.”

CISA Issues New Guidance on Managing Insider Cybersecurity Risks

 



The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has released new guidance warning that insider threats represent a major and growing risk to organizational security. The advisory was issued during the same week reports emerged about a senior agency official mishandling sensitive information, drawing renewed attention to the dangers posed by internal security lapses.

In its announcement, CISA described insider threats as risks that originate from within an organization and can arise from either malicious intent or accidental mistakes. The agency stressed that trusted individuals with legitimate system access can unintentionally cause serious harm to data security, operational stability, and public confidence.

To help organizations manage these risks, CISA published an infographic outlining how to create a structured insider threat management team. The agency recommends that these teams include professionals from multiple departments, such as human resources, legal counsel, cybersecurity teams, IT leadership, and threat analysis units. Depending on the situation, organizations may also need to work with external partners, including law enforcement or health and risk professionals.

According to CISA, these teams are responsible for overseeing insider threat programs, identifying early warning signs, and responding to potential risks before they escalate into larger incidents. The agency also pointed organizations to additional free resources, including a detailed mitigation guide, training workshops, and tools to evaluate the effectiveness of insider threat programs.

Acting CISA Director Madhu Gottumukkala emphasized that insider threats can undermine trust and disrupt critical operations, making them particularly challenging to detect and prevent.

Shortly before the guidance was released, media reports revealed that Gottumukkala had uploaded sensitive CISA contracting documents into a public version of an AI chatbot during the previous summer. According to unnamed officials, the activity triggered automated security alerts designed to prevent unauthorized data exposure from federal systems.

CISA’s Director of Public Affairs later confirmed that the chatbot was used with specific controls in place and stated that the usage was limited in duration. The agency noted that the official had received temporary authorization to access the tool and last used it in mid-July 2025.

By default, CISA blocks employee access to public AI platforms unless an exception is granted. The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees CISA, also operates an internal AI system designed to prevent sensitive government information from leaving federal networks.

Security experts caution that data shared with public AI services may be stored or processed outside the user’s control, depending on platform policies. This makes such tools particularly risky when handling government or critical infrastructure information.

The incident adds to a series of reported internal disputes and security-related controversies involving senior leadership, as well as similar lapses across other US government departments in recent years. These cases are a testament to how poor internal controls and misuse of personal or unsecured technologies can place national security and critical infrastructure at risk.

While CISA’s guidance is primarily aimed at critical infrastructure operators and regional governments, recent events suggest that insider threat management remains a challenge across all levels of government. As organizations increasingly rely on AI and interconnected digital systems, experts continue to stress that strong oversight, clear policies, and leadership accountability are essential to reducing insider-related security risks.

GoTo Resolve Tool Mimics Ransomware Tactics in Stealth Attacks

 

Security researchers have raised alarms over a remote administration tool that can quietly turn into a stealthy entry point for cybercriminals. The program, flagged as HEURRemoteAdmin.GoToResolve.gen, is now classified as a Potentially Unwanted Application (PUA) due to the way it conceals its presence and behavior from end users. 

The warning comes from the Lat61 Threat Intelligence Team at Point Wild, a data breach prevention firm that analyzed how this tool can transform a routine IT utility into a serious security liability. According to their report, the application is linked to GoTo Resolve, a legitimate platform formerly known as LogMeIn, widely used by IT support teams for remote access and troubleshooting. 

What makes this case particularly concerning is the tool’s ability to install and operate “silently,” maintaining a persistent foothold on the system without any visible prompts or notifications. Researchers found it buried in a directory named C:\Program Files (x86)\GoTo Resolve Unattended\, along with a bundled file called “32000~” that contains hidden instructions for managing the application in the background. 

Because it runs unattended, this component effectively creates a new attack surface, similar to leaving a window unlocked for intruders. Threat actors who manage to hijack the tool could exploit its background capabilities to move laterally, gather intelligence, or prepare a larger compromise, all without attracting attention from the user sitting at the keyboard.

The most disturbing link is to ransomware tradecraft through the use of the Windows Restart Manager library, RstrtMgr.dll. This DLL has been abused in past campaigns by high-profile groups like Conti and Cactus ransomware, as well as the BiBi wiper, to terminate processes that might block file encryption or forensic analysis, including antivirus tools and security services. Even more deceptive is the fact that the software carries a valid digital signature from GoTo Technologies USA, LLC, giving it an appearance of full legitimacy in the eyes of both users and operating systems.

Experts stress that a trusted signature does not guarantee safe behavior and warn organizations to treat this tool as a high-risk component unless explicitly approved and monitored by their security teams, calling its stealthy execution and Restart Manager loading a form of “dangerous pre-positioning” for future, more destructive attacks.

Dragos Links Coordinated Polish Power Grid Cyberattack to Russia-Backed ELECTRUM Group

A wave of connected cyber intrusions struck multiple points in Poland’s electricity infrastructure near the end of 2025. Dragos, an industrial control system security firm, assessed with limited certainty that the activity aligns with a Russia-linked group known as ELECTRUM. While attribution is not definitive, the techniques and patterns resemble previous operations tied to the cluster. Investigators also flagged unusual entry routes through third-party maintenance channels, with disruptions occurring amid heightened geopolitical tensions. No major blackouts followed, but systems recorded repeated probing attempts. Response teams moved quickly to isolate affected segments, and attribution was supported by forensic traces left during the breaches. Officials emphasized continued vigilance despite containment. 

At one site, critical hardware was destroyed and left unusable, marking what Dragos described as the first large-scale cyberattack focused on decentralized energy systems such as wind turbines and solar generation connected to the grid. Operational technology used in electricity distribution was accessed without authorization, and systems managing renewable output faced interference even though overall service stayed online. Communication failures also affected combined heat and power facilities. Entry was gained through systems tied to grid stability, with damage remaining localized but irreversible at one location. 

Dragos noted links between ELECTRUM and another group, KAMACITE, with overlaps consistent with the broader Sandworm ecosystem, also tracked as APT44 or Seashell Blizzard. KAMACITE is believed to specialize in initial access, using spear-phishing, stolen credentials, and attacks against exposed public-facing systems. 

After entry, KAMACITE reportedly conducts quiet reconnaissance and persistence in OT environments, creating conditions for later action. Once access is established, ELECTRUM activity is assessed to bridge IT and OT networks, deploying tooling inside operational systems. Actions attributed to ELECTRUM can include manipulating control systems or disrupting physical processes, either through direct operator interface interaction or purpose-built ICS malware depending on objectives. 

Dragos described a division of roles between the clusters that enables long-term access and flexible execution, including delayed disruption. Even without immediate damage, persistent access can create long-term risk. KAMACITE-linked activity also appears geographically unconstrained, with scanning against U.S. industrial systems reported as recently as mid-2025. 

In Poland, attackers targeted systems that connect grid operators with distributed energy resources, disrupting coordination. Roughly three dozen sites experienced operational impact. Investigators said poorly secured network devices and exploited vulnerabilities enabled entry, allowing intruders to reach Remote Terminal Units and move through communications infrastructure. Dragos said the attackers showed strong knowledge of grid systems, successfully disabling communications tools and certain OT components. 

However, the full scope remains unclear, including whether operational commands were issued or whether the focus stayed on communications disruption. Overall, Dragos assessed the incident as more opportunistic than carefully planned, with attackers attempting rapid disruption once inside by wiping Windows systems, resetting configurations, and trying to permanently brick equipment. The hardest-hit devices supported grid safety and stability monitoring. 

Dragos concluded that the damage shows OT intrusions are shifting from preparation into active attacks against systems that manage distributed generation.

Google Targets Residential Proxy Services Fueled by Malware Operations

 


The underlying ecosystem of legitimate proxy and VPN providers might appear to be fragmented at the surface, but as far as Google is concerned, there is something much more coordinated and deceptive below the surface. In a recent investigation conducted by Google's Threat Intelligence Group, an extensive operation centered on an elaborate network known as IPIDEA was uncovered.

IPIDEA, the network, allegedly exercised covert control over several proxy and VPN brands that presented themselves as independent, trustworthy entities. It is now clear that these brands are managed by the very same malicious operators, who employ misleading practices to steal residential IP addresses from unwitting users and combine them with an immense proxy infrastructure, which is the result of the research. 

As part of the IPIDEA ecosystem of proxy and virtual private network services, Google has taken coordinated action to dismantle what it believes to be one of the largest residential proxy networks in the world, as it moves against it. Through this effort, which is being conducted in collaboration with external partners, it is being hoped that infrastructure will be ripped apart that has historically enabled cybercrime, espionage, and large-scale fraud by making use of the false identities of ordinary internet users to disguise malicious activity behind their internet connections.

Using IPIDEA's software development kits, Google's Threat Intelligence Group was able to enroll compromised devices in botnets as well as use its proxy services to manage and exploit those compromised devices at large scale. It was Google's legal measures that disrupted these activities, resulting in the takedown of dozens of domain names that were used to route proxy traffic and control infected systems in an effort to prevent further attacks.

Although IPIDEA used to advertise themselves as a leading global proxy provider with millions of daily updated residential IP addresses, its primary website is no longer accessible, despite previously advertising itself as a leading global proxy provider. 

According to Google, the network's infrastructure had been utilized by more than 550 distinct threat groups globally up until this month, spanning cybercriminal enterprises and state-aligned actors from countries such as China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea, according to Google.

Researchers reported that a variety of activities were observed, including intrusions into SaaS environments as well as on-premises networks, password-spray campaigns, and broader espionage operations. 

A residential proxy service has become a central enabler of modern threats by giving attackers the ability to blend in with legitimate internet traffic at home and evade detection as a means of escaping detection, a statement underscored by the report. It is not known whether Google's Threat Intelligence Group has officially attributed IPIDEA's operation to a particular individual, but the artifacts that were gathered during the investigation may give some insight into the operation. 

As a result of the research, digital certificates analyzed by researchers were linked to Hong Kong-based business entities, which indicated that the network was backed up by an organizational structure. As Google claims, the operators exercised centralized control over at least 13 different proxy and virtual private network brands, including IPIDEA, 360 Proxy, ABC Proxy, Luna Proxy, and PIA S5 Proxy, which appeared to be independent services. 

A significant part of the network's expansion was fueled by the covert distribution of software development kits that were embedded in seemingly legitimate applications. This was a strategy that led users to turn their devices into residential exit nodes that could route third party traffic for a considerable period of time. 

Over 600 Android applications and over 3,000 Windows programs were found in Google's search results that contained the code for IPIDEA, many of which were marketed as utilities, games, or VPN tools. 

Even though the SDKs were marketed to developers as benign mechanisms for monetizing their applications, they often offered payouts based on the number of installs and wide compatibility between platforms, but researchers found that the underlying functionality enabled large amounts of consumer devices to be repurposed as proxy infrastructures, raising concerns about how unsuspecting users were lured into such an operation without the awareness or consent of the users themselves. 

There are many technical and commercial mechanisms underlying IPIDEA that have been examined by Google in greater detail, revealing a highly organized and adaptive proxy ecosystem rather than a single service, as portrayed by the company in its investigation. As the company pointed out, IPIDEA controlled multiple monetization software development kits, including Castar, Earn, Hex, and Packet, all of which shared similar code patterns and command-and-control infrastructures.

It was known that these SDKs used a two-tier system, through which infected devices connected first to tier-one domains and obtained instructions and connection details from a rotating pool of around 7,400 tier-two servers, a number that fluctuated daily and was determined by operational conditions. 

In addition to proxy services, the same infrastructure could also be embedded in VPN applications, like Galleon VPN, Radish VPN, and the now-defunct Aman VPN, that provided the users with functionality they expected. Additionally, devices were also enrolled as exit nodes in the proxy network at the same time. 

During its investigation, Google discovered that there were more than 3,500 Windows executables and over 600 Android applications communicating with IPIDEA-controlled domains, most of them masquerading as legitimate system utilities, games, or content apps. 

Consequently, Google and its partners began seeking legal action to dismantle the network's command-and-control and marketing domains, updated Google Play Protect so users would receive warnings and that affected applications would be automatically removed from certified devices.

In addition, he pointed out that such proxy services can pose a wider range of risks, since they can not only route third party traffic but also deliver malicious traffic to enrolled devices. According to the company, IPIDEA represents only one element of a larger ecosystem involving residential proxy abuse, encompassing not only IPIDEA but other tools such as ByteConnect and services from AISURU and Kimwolf as well. 

As a result, SDKs geared towards monetization are becoming increasingly popular as a means of exploitation of large-scale consumer devices. In the case of IPIDEA, researchers believe that there is an underlying threat to residential proxy services, which blurs the line between legitimate infrastructure and covert abuse, illustrating a broader and growing risk. 

According to Google’s research, such networks thrive when user trust is exploited, inserted into everyday applications, and consumer VPN tools, while quietly transforming personal devices into operational assets for cybercriminals as well as state-aligned actors.

Argus warns that an increasingly sophisticated technology infrastructure allows malicious traffic to blend seamlessly into normal household internet activity and that a greater level of scrutiny is needed for third-party SDKs and better safeguards around app monetization practices. This is the state of affairs with the increasing sophistication and scale of these operations.

IPIDEA has been disrupted and protections are tightened through Google Play Protect as a result of disrupting IPIDEA's infrastructure. In addition to neutralizing a single network, the company said it wanted to raise awareness that seemingly benign digital services can be weaponized and that developers, platform providers, and users must remain vigilant against hidden proxy abuse in order to prevent it from occurring.