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Malicious dYdX Packages Drain User Wallets in Supply Chain Attack

  Malicious open-source packages targeting the dYdX cryptocurrency exchange have enabled attackers to drain user wallets, exposing once agai...

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German Authorities Alert Public to Signal Account Takeover Campaign

 

The use of secure messaging applications has long been seen as the final line of defense against persistent digital surveillance in an era of widespread digital surveillance. This assumption is now being challenged by Germany's domestic intelligence service, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, which, in conjunction with the Federal Office for Information Security, has jointly issued a rare advisory detailing a calculated cyberattack attributed to a state-backed adversary. 

It is clear that the warning highlights a deliberate strategy to infiltrate private communications through deception, rather than technical exploits, targeting individuals who rely heavily on them. The agencies report that the operation targets high-ranking political decision-makers, senior military personnel, diplomatic representatives, and investigative journalists in Germany and across Europe. Its implications go beyond the compromise of individual accounts to include high-ranking officials and foreign diplomats. 

Access to secure messenger profiles by unauthorized users could expose confidential information, sensitive professional networks, and trusted contact chains, which in turn could compromise entire institutional ecosystems. 

As a result, the campaign does not rely on malware deployment or the exploitation of Signal platform vulnerabilities. It attempts to manipulate the application's legitimate account recovery and verification features in order to achieve its objectives.

The attackers intend to quietly intercept private conversations and harvest contact information without triggering conventional security alarms by exploiting human trust rather than software vulnerabilities. The attack sequence reflects this strategy. The attackers are impersonating “Signal Support” or impersonating a fabricated assistance channel called a “Signal Security ChatBot” and contacting selected victims directly. 

Receivers are pressured to divulge verification codes or PINs sent via SMS as a precaution against data loss or account suspension, under the pretense that the adversary will be able to take control of the account upon surrendering these credentials. Based on the initial findings, the joint advisory clarifies that the attack is not a result of technical compromise of the platform's codebase or malicious payload deployment. 

By combining carefully staged social engineering with Signal's routine functionality, the operators are exploiting the trust users place in its privacy-centered design. By manipulating the standard account verification and recovery workflows, the attackers are able to induce their victims to divulge the very credentials that secure their communication. 

In one documented scenario, a person impersonating an official support channel is referred to as “Signal Support” or “Signal Security Chatbot.” The targeted organization receives messages alleging fabricated security irregularities and urges it to act immediately to prevent alleged data loss or account suspension. 

By engineering urgency, recipients are prompted to disclose their Signal PINs or SMS verification codes, overriding caution. When the adversary possesses these credentials, they may re-register the account on infrastructure under their control, effectively transferring ownership of the account. Such situations may result in the legitimate user being locked out and the intruder gaining unfettered access to message histories, active conversations, and stored contact information. 

A parallel technique utilizes Signal's multi-device linking capability, enabling seamless synchronization across mobile, tablet, and desktop clients. By causing victims to scan a malicious QR code, threat actors are able to inadvertently attach additional devices to their accounts by posing as a threat actor. With this method, one-on-one exchanges, group discussions, and associated metadata are persistently visible, almost real-time, without generating immediate suspicion.

Since the original device remains functional, the victims may not be aware that their communications are mirrored elsewhere. Authorities emphasize that the absence of malware is a defining characteristic of the campaign. In lieu of exploit chains or zero-day vulnerabilities, attackers rely solely on the voluntary disclosure of valid cryptographic credentials to gain access. 

Through the use of this approach, they are able to circumvent conventional endpoint security systems and network monitoring systems because the account access appears to be procedurally valid within the platform's security environment. 

Using trusted features inappropriately complicates the detection process as well as amplifies the potential intelligence value of the intrusion. It is further noted that individuals whose communications are sensitive from a diplomatic, military, political, or investigative perspective have been given priority in the targeting profile. 

By compromised such accounts, one can gain access to confidential discussions, gain insight into policy decisions and operational planning, and reconstruct professional networks to target subsequent targets. Furthermore, controlling trusted accounts provides an opportunity for impersonation, allowing misleading information to be distributed or sensitive exchanges to be manipulated.

It is reported that the activity was likely to be perpetrated by a state-sponsored actor, but officials caution that these techniques are neither technical complex nor exclusive to government-backed organizations. 

The use of social engineering rather than sophisticated exploitation reduces the barrier to replication, enhancing the likelihood that criminal enterprises or other hostile actors may use similar tactics with comparable impact in the future. The German authorities emphasize in their concluding guidance that the durability of encrypted communication ultimately depends on both informed user vigilance and cryptographic strength. 

Educating institutions and high profile individuals on how to respond to unsolicited account-related requests with heightened scrutiny, strengthening internal awareness of verification workflows, and integrating secure messaging hygiene into operational security procedures is recommended.

An audit of linked devices on a regular basis, strict control over authentication credentials, as well as the activation of additional account safeguards are not offered as optional enhancements, but as mandatory requirements in a threat environment where deception replaces exploitation. 

According to the agencies, resilience will depend more on disciplined user behavior and proactive defensive posture than on technological assurances alone, as adversaries continue to use legitimate platform features for covert access. 

s a result of the advisory, institutions will not be able to protect themselves from compromise when authentication workflows themselves become an attack surface for compromised platforms. 

It is recommended that organizations evaluate how secure messaging tools are integrated into executive and diplomatic communications, ensuring that account recovery procedures, device management policies, and identity verification protocols are governed by formal security controls as opposed to informal user discretion, according to German officials. 

An adversary who weaponizes legitimacy rather than exploiting flaws will need to cultivate procedural discipline, a continuous threat awareness, and a recognition that trust, once manipulated, can have the same impact as any technical vulnerability.

Global Cyber Espionage Campaign Hits Governments in 37 Countries

 

A massive cyber spying effort - linked to a government-backed group operating out of Asia - has breached governmental bodies and essential infrastructure targets in 37 nations, recent findings by Palo Alto Networks reveal. Known under the identifier TGR-STA-1030, the assault reached more than 70 institutions during the last twelve months. This intrusion ranks among the broadest state-associated hacking episodes seen since the major compromise involving SolarWinds back in 2020. 

Attack efforts targeted government bodies handling commerce, monetary policy, power resources, frontier controls, one expert noted. What makes this operation distinct is its breadth and financial angle - data points show interest in critical raw materials, ongoing commercial talks, even realignments in global partnerships. 

What stood out, per Cybersecurity Dive’s coverage, was how Palo Alto labeled the campaign - the widest state-affiliated spying push seen lately. The firm avoided naming any nation directly, yet pointed to origins across Asia, highlighting its reach alongside advanced execution. Though no explicit attribution emerged, the depth of coordination suggested a well-resourced hand behind it.  

Five national law enforcement and border units fell victim, alongside financial branches across three countries, while several agencies handling natural resources or diplomacy also faced breaches. Targeted entities ranged from Taiwan’s state-backed electrical infrastructure provider to Mongolia’s federal policing body, including Indonesia’s senior administrative figure, the Czech legislative chamber plus its defense command, and Brazil’s energy regulatory office. 

State-linked telecom enterprises were impacted too, scattered through different regions without pattern. Peter Renals, principal security researcher with Palo Alto’s Unit 42 threat intelligence team, told Axios that government agencies and critical infrastructure organizations in the United States and United Kingdom were not impacted. Timing of the cyber intrusions seemed tightly linked to key political and economic moments. Around a month prior to Honduras’ presidential vote - marked by discussions on Taiwan relations - numerous state-linked IPs faced targeting. 

Meanwhile, in Mexico, suspicious digital actions emerged after news broke about trade probes connected to upcoming tariff decisions. Facing rising cyber threats, European authorities saw increased digital intrusions. After Czech leader Petr Pavel met with the Dalai Lama, scans appeared across defense, law enforcement, legislative, and administrative systems in the country. In parallel, German infrastructure came under scrutiny - close to five hundred public-sector internet addresses were probed that summer. 

Though separate events, both incidents pointed toward coordinated probing of state-level networks. Beginning with digital deception, the group used fake emails alongside unpatched security holes to enter systems. Exploiting weaknesses in tools like Microsoft Exchange Server and SAP Solution Manager was observed by analysts tracking their moves. Hidden inside compromised machines, a stealthy program named ShadowGuard took root beneath regular operating layers. 

This custom-built tool ran deep in Linux environments, masking operations where most scans rarely look. Alone between November and December, scans hit infrastructure across 155 nations - evidence of persistent probing ahead of possible follow-up actions. Though Palo Alto Networks alerted impacted governments and collaborators, the group behind the activity still operates, its presence a steady concern for critical systems and state-level safety around the globe.

Hackers Use Fake Oura AI Server to Spread StealC Malware

 



Cybersecurity analysts have uncovered a fresh wave of malicious activity involving the SmartLoader malware framework. In this campaign, attackers circulated a compromised version of an Oura Model Context Protocol server in order to deploy a data-stealing program known as StealC.

Researchers from Straiker’s AI Research team, also referred to as STAR Labs, reported that the perpetrators replicated a legitimate Oura MCP server. This genuine tool is designed to connect artificial intelligence assistants with health metrics collected from the Oura Ring through Oura’s official API. To make their fraudulent version appear authentic, the attackers built a network of fabricated GitHub forks and staged contributor activity, creating the illusion of a credible open-source project.

The ultimate objective was to use the altered MCP server as a delivery vehicle for StealC. Once installed, StealC is capable of harvesting usernames, saved browser passwords, cryptocurrency wallet information, and other valuable credentials from infected systems.

SmartLoader itself was initially documented by OALABS Research in early 2024. It functions as a loader, meaning it prepares and installs additional malicious components after gaining a foothold. Previous investigations showed that SmartLoader was commonly distributed through deceptive GitHub repositories that relied on AI-generated descriptions and branding to appear legitimate.

In March 2025, Trend Micro published findings explaining that these repositories frequently masqueraded as gaming cheats, cracked software tools, or cryptocurrency utilities. Victims were enticed with promises of free premium functionality and encouraged to download compressed ZIP files, which ultimately executed SmartLoader on their devices.

Straiker’s latest analysis reveals an evolution of that tactic. Instead of merely posting suspicious repositories, the threat actors established multiple counterfeit GitHub profiles and interconnected projects that hosted weaponized MCP servers. They then submitted the malicious server to a recognized MCP registry called MCP Market. According to the researchers, the listing remains visible within the MCP directory, increasing the risk that developers searching for integration tools may encounter it.

By infiltrating trusted directories and leveraging reputable platforms such as GitHub, the attackers exploited the inherent trust developers place in established ecosystems. Unlike rapid, high-volume malware campaigns, this operation progressed slowly. Straiker noted that the group spent months cultivating legitimacy before activating the malicious payload, demonstrating a calculated effort to gain access to valuable developer environments.

The staged operation unfolded in four key phases. First, at least five fabricated GitHub accounts, identified as YuzeHao2023, punkpeye, dvlan26, halamji, and yzhao112, were created to generate convincing forks of the authentic Oura MCP project. Second, a separate repository containing the harmful payload was introduced under another account named SiddhiBagul. Third, these fabricated accounts were listed as contributors to reinforce the appearance of collaboration, while the original project author was intentionally omitted. Finally, the altered MCP server was submitted to MCP Market for broader visibility.

If downloaded and executed, the malicious package runs an obfuscated Lua script. This script installs SmartLoader, which then deploys StealC. The campaign signals a shift from targeting individuals seeking pirated content to focusing on developers, whose systems often store API keys, cloud credentials, cryptocurrency wallets, and access to production infrastructure. Stolen information could facilitate subsequent intrusions into larger networks.

To mitigate the threat, organizations are advised to catalogue all installed MCP servers, implement formal security reviews before adopting such tools, confirm the authenticity and source of repositories, and monitor network traffic for unusual outbound communications or persistence behavior.

Straiker concluded that the incident exposes weaknesses in how companies assess developing AI tools. The attackers capitalized on outdated trust assumptions applied to a rapidly expanding attack surface, underscoring the need for stricter validation practices in modern development environments.

China Raises Security Concerns Over Rapidly Growing OpenClaw AI Tool

 

A fresh alert from China’s tech regulators highlights concerns around OpenClaw, an open-source AI tool gaining traction fast. Though built with collaboration in mind, its setup flaws might expose systems to intrusion. Missteps during installation may lead to unintended access by outside actors. Security gaps, if left unchecked, can result in sensitive information slipping out. Officials stress careful handling - especially among firms rolling it out at scale. Attention to detail becomes critical once deployment begins. Oversight now could prevent incidents later. Vigilance matters most where automation meets live data flows. 

OpenClaw operations were found lacking proper safeguards, officials reported. Some setups used configurations so minimal they risked exposure when linked to open networks. Though no outright prohibition followed, stress landed on tighter controls and stronger protection layers. Oversight must improve, inspectors noted - security cannot stay this fragile. 

Despite known risks, many groups still overlook basic checks on outward networks tied to OpenClaw setups. Security teams should verify user identities more thoroughly while limiting who gets in - especially where systems meet the internet. When left unchecked, even helpful open models might hand opportunities to those probing for weaknesses. 

Since launching in November, OpenClaw has seen remarkable momentum. Within weeks, it captured interest across continents - driven by strong community engagement. Over 100,000 GitHub stars appeared fast, evidence of widespread developer curiosity. In just seven days, nearly two million people visited its page, Steinberger noted. Because of how swiftly teams began using it, comparisons to leading AI tools emerged often. Recently, few agent frameworks have sparked such consistent conversation. 

Not stopping at global interest, attention within Chinese tech circles grew fast. Because of rising need, leading cloud platforms began introducing setups for remote OpenClaw operation instead of local device use. Alibaba Cloud, Tencent Cloud, and Baidu now provide specialized access points. At these spots online, users find rented servers built to handle the processing load of the AI tool. Unexpectedly, the ministry issued a caution just as OpenClaw’s reach began stretching past coders into broader networks. 

A fresh social hub named Moltbook appeared earlier this week - pitched as an online enclave solely for OpenClaw bots - and quickly drew notice. Soon afterward, flaws emerged: Wiz, a security analyst group, revealed a major defect on the site that laid bare confidential details from many members. While excitement built around innovation, risks surfaced quietly beneath. 

Unexpectedly, the incident revealed deeper vulnerabilities tied to fast-growing AI systems built without thorough safety checks. When open-source artificial intelligence grows stronger and easier to use, officials warn that small setup errors might lead to massive leaks of private information. 

Security specialists now stress how fragile these platforms can be if left poorly managed. With China's newest guidance, attention shifts toward stronger oversight of artificial intelligence safeguards. Though OpenClaw continues to operate across sectors, regulators stress accountability - firms using these tools must manage setup carefully, watch performance closely, while defending against new digital risks emerging over time.

Spain Ministry of Science Cyberattack Triggers IT Shutdown, Hacker Claims Data Breach

 

A cyberattack targeting the Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities has led to a partial shutdown of government IT infrastructure, interrupting essential digital services relied upon by researchers, universities, students, and businesses nationwide.

Authorities initially referred to the disruption as a “technical incident,” but mounting evidence — alongside confirmations from Spanish media — now indicates the event was the result of a cyberattack that may have compromised sensitive academic, personal, and financial data.

The ministry is a key pillar of Spain’s higher education and research framework. Any outage affecting its digital systems carries significant operational and administrative consequences, elevating the seriousness of the breach beyond a routine technical malfunction.

In a statement posted on its electronic headquarters, the ministry acknowledged the disruption and announced the temporary closure of several digital services.

“As a result of a technical incident that is currently being assessed, the electronic headquarters of the Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities has been partially closed.”

The notice further stated: “All ongoing administrative procedures are suspended, safeguarding the rights and legitimate interests of all persons affected by said temporary closure, resulting in an extension of all deadlines for the various procedures affected.”

Officials added that deadline extensions would remain active: "until the complete resolution of the aforementioned incident occurs," citing Article 32 of Law 39/2015.

While the extension of deadlines offers procedural protection to affected users, the absence of immediate clarity regarding the nature of the disruption sparked concern among stakeholders.

Hacker Claims Responsibility for Breach

Concerns escalated after a threat actor operating under the alias Gordon Freeman appeared on underground forums claiming responsibility for the attack. The individual alleged exploitation of a critical Insecure Direct Object Reference (IDOR) vulnerability, which reportedly granted “full-admin-level access” to internal systems.

The attacker published sample screenshots online — though their authenticity has not been independently confirmed — showing what appear to be official documents, email addresses, enrollment records, and internal communications.

Spanish outlet OKDIARIO reported that a ministry spokesperson acknowledged the IT disruption stemmed from a cyberattack and confirmed that the electronic headquarters had been taken offline to evaluate the potential scope of the breach.

Although the forum where the leak was allegedly posted has since gone offline and the data has not resurfaced elsewhere, early indicators suggest the materials could be genuine. If verified, the breach would represent a significant failure in access control safeguards.
According to the attacker’s claims, the compromised data may include:
  • Scanned identification documents, including NIEs and passports
  • Email addresses
  • Payment confirmations displaying IBAN numbers
  • Academic transcripts and apostilled degrees
  • Curricula containing private personal details
If confirmed, the breach could expose thousands of students and researchers to identity theft, financial fraud, and long-term privacy risks. Academic records, once leaked, are particularly difficult to revoke or replace.

The incident reflects a broader cybersecurity challenge in Spain. Cybercrime now represents more than one in six recorded criminal offenses nationwide. Authorities have reported a 35% increase in cyberattacks this year, with daily incidents exceeding 45,000. Between late February and early March, reported attacks surged by 750% compared to the same timeframe last year.

During the week of 5–11 March 2025, Spain ranked as the most targeted country globally, accounting for 22.6% of all recorded cyber incidents — surpassing even the United States.

Experts attribute the trend to two primary factors: rapid digital transformation — accelerated by EU-backed modernization initiatives — and insufficient investment in cybersecurity infrastructure. Ransomware incidents alone have climbed 120%, disproportionately affecting public institutions and small-to-medium enterprises.


Flickr Discloses Third-Party Breach Exposing User Names, Emails

 

Photo-sharing platform Flickr has disclosed a potential data breach involving a third-party email service provider that may have exposed sensitive user information. The incident, reported on February 6, 2026, stems from a vulnerability in a system operated by this unnamed provider, which Flickr used for email-related services. While the company has not revealed how many users were affected, it has begun notifying impacted members and urging them to exercise caution in the coming days.

According to Flickr, the issue was identified on February 5, 2026, when the company was alerted to the security flaw in the third-party system. Engineers moved quickly and shut down access to the affected system within hours of being notified, in an effort to limit any potential misuse of exposed data. The company has not yet provided technical details about the vulnerability or responded to media requests for additional comment. However, Flickr has emphasized that it is actively investigating the incident and working to tighten its security posture around external vendors.

The exposed data includes a range of personal and account-related information belonging to Flickr members. This may involve real names, email addresses, Flickr usernames, account types, IP addresses, general location data, and records of user activity on the platform. Importantly, Flickr has stressed that passwords and payment card numbers were not compromised in this incident, since these details were not stored in the impacted third-party system. Even so, the nature of the leaked data raises concerns about targeted phishing and profiling attempts.

In emails sent to affected users, Flickr is advising members to review their account settings carefully and look for any unexpected changes that might indicate suspicious access. The company is also warning users to stay alert for phishing emails that reference their Flickr activity or appear to come from official Flickr channels. As part of its guidance, Flickr reiterated that it will never ask for passwords via email and recommended that users change their passwords on other services if they reuse the same credentials. This precaution helps limit the fallout if exposed addresses are linked to reused passwords elsewhere.

Flickr has apologized to its community, acknowledging the concern the incident may cause and reaffirming its commitment to user privacy. As part of its response, the company says it is conducting a thorough investigation, strengthening its system architecture, and enhancing monitoring of its third-party service providers to prevent similar issues in the future. The breach highlights the growing risks associated with outsourced infrastructure and email services, especially for platforms hosting large global communities and vast volumes of user content.

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