FBI forces Chinese malware to delete itself from thousands of US computersThe FBI successfully removed Chinese malware from over 4,200 US computers using a self-delete command.
FBI deleted Chinese malware from 4,200 US computersThe FBI successfully removed a significant Chinese malware from over 4,200 U.S. computers.
US authorities just purged malware from thousands of devices across the worldInternational collaboration led to removal of PlugX malware from over 4,200 devices, marking a significant win against Chinese cyber espionage efforts.
FBI wipes Chinese PlugX malware from 4,200+ US Windows PCsFBI and French police collaborated to eradicate the PlugX malware used by Mustang Panda, a group linked to Chinese government hacking.
Financially motivated hackers are helping their espionage counterparts and vice versaRA World ransomware group is using a toolset traditionally linked to a Chinese espionage group, highlighting a potential convergence between espionage and ransomware tactics.
FBI forces Chinese malware to delete itself from thousands of US computersThe FBI successfully removed Chinese malware from over 4,200 US computers using a self-delete command.
FBI deleted Chinese malware from 4,200 US computersThe FBI successfully removed a significant Chinese malware from over 4,200 U.S. computers.
US authorities just purged malware from thousands of devices across the worldInternational collaboration led to removal of PlugX malware from over 4,200 devices, marking a significant win against Chinese cyber espionage efforts.
FBI wipes Chinese PlugX malware from 4,200+ US Windows PCsFBI and French police collaborated to eradicate the PlugX malware used by Mustang Panda, a group linked to Chinese government hacking.
Financially motivated hackers are helping their espionage counterparts and vice versaRA World ransomware group is using a toolset traditionally linked to a Chinese espionage group, highlighting a potential convergence between espionage and ransomware tactics.
Zombie worm continues to infect millions of IPs years after it was left for deadAn old USB worm, self-replicating and backdooring devices, remains active on thousands if not millions of machines despite creators losing control.