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US DoJ Charges 54 Linked to ATM Jackpotting Scheme Using Ploutus Malware, Tied to Tren de Aragua

  The U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) has revealed the indictment of 54 people for their alleged roles in a sophisticated, multi-million-d...

All the recent news you need to know

RansomHouse Develops More Complex Encryption for Recent Attacks

 


The ransomware group known as RansomHouse has recently enhanced the encryption mechanism used in its attacks, moving away from a basic, single-step process to a more advanced, multi-layered approach. This change reflects a deliberate effort to strengthen the effectiveness of its ransomware operations.

Earlier versions of the encryptor relied on a linear method, where data was transformed in one continuous pass. The updated version introduces multiple stages of processing, which results in stronger encryption, improved execution speed, and greater stability across modern systems. These improvements increase the pressure on victims by making encrypted data harder to recover and negotiations more favorable for attackers after systems are locked.

RansomHouse first appeared in late 2021 as a cybercrime group focused on data extortion, where stolen information was used as leverage rather than encryption alone. Over time, the group expanded its tactics and began deploying ransomware encryptors during attacks. It also developed an automated tool, known as MrAgent, designed to simultaneously encrypt multiple VMware ESXi hypervisors, a technique that allows attackers to disrupt large virtualized environments efficiently.

In more recent activity, security analysts observed RansomHouse using more than one ransomware strain during attacks on a major Japanese e-commerce company. This suggests a flexible operational strategy rather than reliance on a single malware family.

Further insight into the group’s evolving capabilities comes from a new analysis by cybersecurity researchers, who examined RansomHouse’s latest encryptor, internally referred to as “Mario.” This version introduces a two-stage data transformation process that relies on two different encryption keys: one substantially longer than the other. Using multiple keys increases the randomness of the encrypted output, making partial file recovery or reconstruction far more challenging.

The updated encryptor also changes how files are handled during the encryption process. Instead of treating all files the same way, it adjusts its behavior based on file size. Large files are processed in dynamically sized chunks, with encryption applied intermittently rather than continuously. This irregular pattern makes the malware harder to analyze because it avoids predictable processing behavior.

Researchers also noted improvements in how the encryptor manages memory. The newer version separates tasks across multiple buffers, with each buffer assigned a specific role during encryption. This design increases operational complexity and reduces inefficiencies found in earlier variants.

Another visible change is the amount of internal information displayed during file processing. Unlike older versions, which only indicated when encryption was complete, the new encryptor provides more detailed status output as it operates.

Despite these changes, the ransomware continues to focus on virtual machine-related files, renaming encrypted data with a new extension and placing ransom instructions across affected directories.

Security researchers caution that these upgrades indicate a troubling direction in ransomware development. While RansomHouse does not carry out attacks at the scale of larger ransomware groups, its continued investment in advanced encryption techniques points to a strategy centered on precision, resilience, and evasion rather than volume.

Iranian Infy Prince of Persia Cyber Espionage Campaign Resurfaces

 

Security researchers have identified renewed cyber activity linked to an Iranian threat actor known as Infy, also referred to as Prince of Persia, marking the group’s re-emergence nearly five years after its last widely reported operations in Europe and the Middle East. According to SafeBreach, the scale and persistence of the group’s recent campaigns suggest it remains an active and capable advanced persistent threat. 

Infy is considered one of the longest-operating APT groups, with its origins traced back to at least 2004. Despite this longevity, it has largely avoided the spotlight compared with other Iranian-linked groups such as Charming Kitten or MuddyWater. Earlier research attributed Infy’s attacks to a relatively focused toolkit built around two primary malware families: Foudre, a downloader and reconnaissance tool, and Tonnerre, a secondary implant used for deeper system compromise and data exfiltration. These tools are believed to be distributed primarily through phishing campaigns. 

Recent analysis from SafeBreach reveals a previously undocumented campaign targeting organizations and individuals across multiple regions, including Iran, Iraq, Turkey, India, Canada, and parts of Europe. The operation relies on updated versions of both Foudre and Tonnerre, with the most recent Tonnerre variant observed in September 2025. Researchers noted changes in initial infection methods, with attackers shifting away from traditional malicious macros toward embedding executables directly within Microsoft Excel documents to initiate malware deployment. 

One of the most distinctive aspects of Infy’s current operations is its resilient command-and-control infrastructure. The malware employs a domain generation algorithm to rotate C2 domains regularly, reducing the likelihood of takedowns. Each domain is authenticated using an RSA-based verification process, ensuring that compromised systems only communicate with attacker-approved servers. SafeBreach researchers observed that the malware retrieves encrypted signature files daily to validate the legitimacy of its C2 endpoints.

Further inspection of the group’s infrastructure uncovered structured directories used for domain verification, logging communications, and storing exfiltrated data. Evidence also suggests the presence of mechanisms designed to support malware updates, indicating ongoing development and maintenance of the toolset. 

The latest version of Tonnerre introduces another notable feature by integrating Telegram as part of its control framework. The malware is capable of interacting with a specific Telegram group through its C2 servers, allowing operators to issue commands and collect stolen data. Access to this functionality appears to be selectively enabled for certain victims, reinforcing the targeted nature of the campaign. 

SafeBreach researchers also identified multiple legacy malware variants associated with Infy’s earlier operations between 2017 and 2020, highlighting a pattern of continuous experimentation and adaptation. Contrary to assumptions that the group had gone dormant after 2022, the new findings indicate sustained activity and operational maturity over the past several years. 

The disclosure coincides with broader research into Iranian cyber operations, including analysis suggesting that some threat groups operate with structured workflows resembling formal government departments. Together, these findings reinforce concerns that Infy remains a persistent espionage threat with evolving technical capabilities and a long-term strategic focus.

Lead Generation Sector Faces Scrutiny Following 16TB Data Exposure


 

In the wake of a massive unsecured MongoDB database, researchers have rekindled their interest in the risks associated with corporate intelligence and lead generation ecosystems. Researchers discovered that the MongoDB instance had been exposed, containing about 16 terabytes of data and approximately 4.3 billion professional records, according to the researchers. 

It is noteworthy that the dataset, which largely mirrored LinkedIn-style information, such as name, title, employer and contact information, is one of the largest known exposures of its type and has serious implications for large-scale social engineering and phishing campaigns utilizing artificial intelligence. Security researcher Bob Diachenko discovered the database by working with the nexos.ai company on November 23, 2025, and it was secure two days later after a responsible disclosure was conducted.

In addition, as a result of the lack of access logs and forensic indicators, it remains impossible to determine whether malicious actors were able to access or exfiltrate the data prior to remediation, leaving affected individuals and organizations with lingering questions about the possibility of misuse. 

In terms of scale and organization, security analysts describe the exposed repository as one of the largest lead-generation datasets on the open internet in recent history, not only because of its enormous size but also because of its organization. According to the structure of the database, scraping and enrichment operations were carried out deliberately and systematically, with evidence suggesting that a large portion of the information was gathered from professional networking sites, such as LinkedIn, in order to enrich the database. 

The records, which are grouped into nine distinct data collections, encompasse a wide range of personal and professional attributes, including full names, e-mail addresses, phone numbers, URLs for LinkedIn profiles, employment histories, educational backgrounds, geographical details, and links to other social media accounts, among other details. 

Researchers point out that the dataset's granularity significantly increases its potential for abuse, especially given the presence of a dedicated collection labeled "intent" containing more than two billion documents in addition to other collections. 

A number of analysts point out that the level of detail the leak has reveals makes it a highly valuable social-engineering asset, enabling cybercriminals to create highly tailored spear-phishing attacks and business email compromise campaigns, able to convince clients that they are trustworthy contacts in order to attack organizations and professionals around the world. 

It has been characterized by cybersecurity experts as the largest lead generation data collection ever discovered publicly accessible by cybersecurity experts, distinguished not only by its sheer size but also by its unusually methodical structure. 

Using the way the information was segmented and enriched, there is evidence to suggest that a large-scale scraping operation may have been used to gather the information, with indicators suggesting that professional networking platforms such as LinkedIn may have served as primary sources in this case. 

In total, the data for the report appears to be distributed over nine separate collections and consists of billions of individual records detailing full names, email addresses, phone numbers, LinkedIn profile links, employment history, educational background, location information and social media accounts which are associated with those records. 

In light of such comprehensive profiling, analysts have warned that the risk of exploitation is significant, particularly since one collection—the "intent" collection which contains over two billion entries—seems to be aimed at capturing behavioral or interest-based signals as well. The depth of insight they offer is, they point out, an exceptionally powerful foundation for spear-phishing and business email compromise schemes that can be launched against organizations and professionals throughout the world. 

In summary, the exposed database was divided into nine distinct collections, bearing labels such as "intent," "profiles," "people," "sitemaps," and "companies," a layout that researchers say reflects a sophisticated data aggregation pipeline with the hallmarks of machine learning. It was based on this organizational structure that investigators concluded that the information was probably obtained through large-scale scraping from professional platforms, like LinkedIn, and Apollo's artificial intelligence-driven sales intelligence service, in order to gather the information. 

The records contained in at least three collections had extensive amounts of personally identifiable data, totaling nearly two billion records, each of which contained extensive amounts of information. There was a wide range of information that was exposed, including names, email addresses, phone numbers, LinkedIn profiles and handle links, job titles, employers, detailed employment histories, educational backgrounds, degrees and certifications, location information, languages, skills, functional roles, links to other social media accounts, images, URLs, email confidence scores, and Apollo-specific identifiers associated with each individual. 

In addition to profile photographs, some collections were made up of personal information that further compounded the sensitivity of the disclosure. It is believed that the scope and depth of the leaked information significantly increased the risk of identity theft as well as financial fraud. 

The Cybernews report noted that it was unable to identify a specific organization that had generated the database, but multiple indicators indicate that it was a commercial lead generation operation. Despite the fact that no formal agreement has been established for who owns the exposed dataset, researchers cautioned against drawing definitive conclusions based on it. 

Investigators discovered that there were several sitemap references that pointed to a lead-generation operation, including those linking “/people” and “/company” pathways to a commercial site that advertised access to more than 700 million professional profiles, a figure that closely matches the number of unique profiles reported by the database. 

A noteworthy aspect of this incident was that after the database was first reported, it was taken offline within one day of the incident. Nonetheless, a number of researchers stressed that attribution remains uncertain, suggesting that the company itself may have been a downstream victim, rather than the original source of the data. 

It is widely acknowledged that security experts warn that the real risk is not simply the extent of the exposure, but the precision it permits. With a dataset of this magnitude and structure, it is possible to use it to launch a highly targeted phishing campaign, a business email compromise scheme, a CEO fraud scheme, and a detailed corporate reconnaissance campaign, particularly against executives and employees of Fortune 500 companies and corporations. 

A massive database of records makes it possible for attackers to automate personalization at a massive scale, dramatically reducing preparation time and maximizing success rates. Cybernews pointed out that modern large language models can produce persuasive, individual messages based on profile information, enabling tens of millions of targeted emails to be sent at minimal cost, where the compromise of a single high-value target is enough for the entire operation to be justified. 

A further concern noted by researchers was that datasets of this nature often serve to enrich other breaches in the process of enrichment, allowing threat actors to assemble extensive, searchable profiles that may ultimately include passwords, device identifiers, and cross-platform account links, making it significantly easier for hackers to conduct social engineering and credential stuffing attacks. 

Despite the fact that cybercriminals can quickly take advantage of large, unprotected databases of this type, security experts warn that these types of databases are highly lucrative assets. The wide variety of information allows attackers to conduct targeted phishing campaigns with precise targeting, including executive fraud schemes that impersonate senior leaders to encourage employees to authorize fraudulent financial transfers. 

As a result of the same data, security teams can also use it to conduct detailed corporate reconnaissance, which is a technique commonly used by cybersecurity teams to assess organization resilience to social engineering threats. However, it can also be effectively utilized by malicious actors in order to identify vulnerable areas for exploiting. 

As a result of the high value placed on enterprise-related data on underground markets, multinational organizations remain particularly attractive targets for cyber criminals. Several analysts have noted that it is highly likely that the dataset includes employees from Fortune 500 companies, which makes it possible for threat actors to isolate specific companies and individuals, and tailor attack techniques to increase their chances of successfully compromising networks or causing financial loss. 

A growing need for better accountability and governance across the lead generation and data brokerage industries is becoming apparent, especially as these datasets continue to intersect with advanced automation and artificial intelligence technologies in a fashion that is unprecedented in the past. 

The security experts say that this incident serves as a reminder that organizations taking care of highly confidential or personal data, as well as encrypting the data, are required to treat access controls, encryption, and continuous monitoring as baseline requirements, and not as optional measures. 

In light of this event, it is imperative that enterprises strengthen their internal defenses by training employees about how to identify social engineering attacks before they take place, improving the process of verifying financial requests, and conducting regular audits to detect social engineering risks before they become exploited. 

Additionally, regulators and industry organizations may be under increasing pressure to clarify accountability standards when it comes to data aggregation practices that rely on large-scale scraping and enrichment on a large scale. 

It is likely that, even though the database was secured, there will be repercussions to the greater extent that the database was exposed, demonstrating how lapses in data stewardship can have a far broader impact beyond a single incident and reshape the threat landscape for businesses and professionals.

£1.8bn BritCard: A Security Investment Against UK Fraud

 

The UK has debated national ID for years, but the discussion has become more pointed alongside growing privacy concerns. Two decades ago Tony Blair could sing the praises of ID cards and instead of public hysteria about data held by government, today Keir Starmer’s digital ID proposal – initially focused on proving a right to work – meets a distinctly more sceptical audience.

That scepticism has been turbocharged by a single figure: the projected £1.8bn cost laid out in the Autumn Budget. Yet the obsession with the initial cost may blind people to the greater scandal: the cost of inaction. Fraud already takes a mind-boggling toll on the UK economy – weighed in at over £200bn a year by recent estimates – while clunky, paper-based ID systems hobble everything from renting a home to getting services. That friction isn’t just annoying, it feeds a broader productivity problem by compelling organizations to waste time and money verifying the same individuals, time and again.

Viewed in that context, £1.8bn should be considered as an investment in security, not a political luxury. The greater risk is not that government over-spend, but that it under spends — or rushes — and winds up with a brittle system that became an embarrassment to the nation. A BritCard deployment at “cut-price” that ends in a breach would cost multiples of what the original outlay was and would cause irreparable damage to public trust. If it is the state’s desire that citizens adopt a new layer of identity, it must prove that the system is reliable as well as restrained.

The good news is that the core design can, in principle,support both goals. BritCard is akin to a digital version of a physical ID card, contained within a secure, government-issued wallet. Most importantly, the core identity data would stay on the user’s device, enabling people to prove certain attributes — like being over 18 — without revealing personal details such as a date of birth or passport number. This model of “sharing what is necessary,” is a practical approach to privacy concerns as it is designed to limit the amount of sensitive information that will be routinely disclosed.

However, none of this eliminates risk. Critics will reasonably worry about any central verification component becoming a lucrative “honeypot.” That is why transparency is non-negotiable: the government should publish how data is stored, accessed and shared, what protections exist, and how citizens opt in and control disclosure.

LinkedIn Profile Data Among Billions of Records Found in Exposed Online Database

 



Cybersecurity researchers recently identified a massive online database that was left publicly accessible without any security protections, exposing a vast collection of professional and personal information. The database contained more than 16 terabytes of data, representing over 4.3 billion individual records that could be accessed without authorization.

Researchers associated with Cybernews reported that the exposed dataset is among the largest lead-generation style databases ever discovered online. The information appears to be compiled from publicly available professional profiles, including data commonly found on LinkedIn, such as profile handles, URLs, and employment-related details.

The exposed records included extensive personal and professional information. This ranged from full names, job titles, employer names, and work histories to education records, degrees, certifications, skills, languages, and location data. In some cases, the datasets also contained phone numbers, email addresses, social media links, and profile images. Additional information related to corporate relationships and contract-linked data was also present, suggesting the dataset was built for commercial or business intelligence purposes.

Investigators believe the data was collected gradually over several years and across different geographic regions. The database was stored in a MongoDB instance, a system commonly used by organizations to manage large volumes of information efficiently. While MongoDB itself is widely used, leaving such databases unsecured can expose sensitive information at scale, which is what occurred in this incident.

The exposed database was discovered on November 23 and secured approximately two days later. However, researchers were unable to determine how long the data had been accessible before it was identified. The exposure is believed to have resulted from misconfiguration or human error rather than a deliberate cyberattack, a common issue in cloud-based data storage environments.

Researchers noted that the database was highly organized and structured, indicating the information was intentionally collected and maintained. Based on its format, the data also appears to be relatively current and accurate.

Such large datasets are particularly attractive to cybercriminals. When combined with automated tools or large language models, this information can be used to conduct large-scale phishing campaigns, generate fraudulent emails, or carry out targeted social engineering attacks against individuals and corporate employees.

Security experts recommend that individuals take precautionary measures following incidents like this. This includes updating passwords for professional networking accounts such as LinkedIn, email services, and any connected financial accounts. Users should also remain cautious of unexpected emails, messages, or phone calls that attempt to pressure them into sharing personal information or clicking unknown links.

Although collecting publicly available data is not illegal in many jurisdictions, failing to properly secure a database of this size may carry legal and regulatory consequences. At present, the ownership and purpose of the database remain unclear. Further updates are expected if more information becomes available or accountability is established.

Clop Ransomware Targets Internet-Facing Gladinet CentreStack Servers in New Data Theft Campaign

 

The Clop ransomware group, also known as Cl0p, has launched a new extortion campaign aimed at Gladinet CentreStack file servers that are exposed to the internet.

Gladinet CentreStack is a file-sharing solution that allows organizations to securely access and share files stored on on-premises servers through web browsers, mobile applications, and mapped drives—without the need for a VPN. According to Gladinet, CentreStack “is used by thousands of businesses from over 49 countries.”

Since April, Gladinet has issued multiple security patches to fix several vulnerabilities that were actively exploited in attacks, including some zero-day flaws.

Threat actors linked to the Clop cybercrime operation are now actively scanning for CentreStack servers accessible online and breaching vulnerable systems. Curated Intelligence confirmed to BleepingComputer that attackers are leaving ransom notes on compromised servers.

At present, the exact vulnerability being used in these intrusions remains unknown. It is unclear whether Clop is exploiting a previously undisclosed zero-day flaw or taking advantage of an older vulnerability that has not yet been patched by affected organizations.

“Incident Responders from the Curated Intelligence community have encountered a new CLOP extortion campaign targeting Internet-facing CentreStack file servers,” warned threat intel group Curated Intelligence on Thursday.

“From recent port scan data, there appears to be at least 200+ unique IPs running the "CentreStack - Login" HTTP Title, making them potential targets of CLOP who is exploiting an unknown CVE (n-day or zero-day) in these systems.”

Clop has repeatedly targeted secure file transfer and file-sharing platforms as part of its extortion operations. The group has previously been responsible for high-profile breaches involving Accellion FTA, GoAnywhere MFT, Cleo, and MOVEit Transfer servers. The MOVEit campaign alone impacted more than 2,770 organizations globally.

More recently, Clop exploited an Oracle E-Business Suite zero-day vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2025-61882, to steal sensitive data from numerous organizations beginning in early August 2025.

Affected Oracle customers reportedly include Harvard University, The Washington Post, GlobalLogic, the University of Pennsylvania, Logitech, and Envoy Air, a subsidiary of American Airlines.

Following successful intrusions, the group exfiltrates confidential data and publishes it on its dark web leak site, often distributing the stolen files via Torrent downloads.

The U.S. Department of State has announced a reward of up to $10 million for information that could help attribute Clop’s cybercrime activities to a foreign government.

A spokesperson for Gladinet was not immediately available to comment when contacted by BleepingComputer earlier today.

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