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Showing posts with label Cyber Security. Show all posts

India Orders Telegram to Crack Down on Pirated Movies and OTT Content, Seeks Compliance Report

 

Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) has directed the messaging platform Telegram to take down the pirated films, OTT content and other audio-visual material uploaded on it. It also called upon the company to put in place measures to actively detect, report, disable and remove such unauthorized content from its platform instead of waiting for the government to notify it of alleged violations. 

As per the ministry's direction, the company was also asked to provide the details regarding steps taken by it against repeat offenders of copyright infringement on its platform like channels, groups, bots, admins, users and other entities. As per the notice sent by the ministry, the company was also asked to provide the details about its grievance redressal mechanism for film producers, OTT platforms, broadcasters, and law enforcement agencies concerning copyright infringements. 

At the same time, Telegram was also asked to suggest the steps it has taken to prevent, detect and remove the unauthorized copyrighted content. The ministry clarified that with the directions issued, there is an attempt to move to the next level in taking action against copyright infringement on online platforms. It emphasized that apart from responding to individual complaints, the onus is upon the companies to put in place robust systems to proactively prevent and detect such violations. 

The government has already taken down over 3,000 Telegram channels for hosting and distributing pirated content. However, it is felt that the step taken so far by blocking channels one by one is not an effective approach and the companies need to move to the next level. The ministry reminded Telegram that it was obliged to comply with the requirements of the Information Technology Act, 2000 and Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021 concerning its responsibility as an intermediary platform. 

It observed that due diligence by the companies so that they are not host to any unlawful activities on their platforms cannot be left to the authorities to identify the channels hosting unlawful content. The ministry drew attention to the fact that violation of copyright laws in India is not only a civil wrong but also a punishable offence under Copyright Act, 1957 and Cinematograph Act, 1952. 

Therefore, continued availability of unauthorized content on Telegram, lack of adequate response as expected by the ministry, and failure to address the issues raised by it may trigger further regulatory actions. The latest initiative by the ministry reflects its commitment to protecting and promoting India's creator economy and the content ecosystem. 

It may be noted that the government has taken several steps to ensure that the rights of filmmakers, broadcasters, OTT platforms, producers, distributors and other content creators are protected against online piracy. By asking the online intermediaries to take more responsibility, the government is encouraging them to adopt better moderation practices in order to prevent the unlawful use of content on their platforms.

Centre Plans New Cybersecurity Norms for Electric Two- and Three-Wheelers to Address Battery Tampering Risks

 

The Central government is preparing to introduce new cybersecurity measures aimed at preventing unauthorised tampering with the batteries of electric two-wheelers and three-wheelers. The proposed regulations are expected to mandate stronger software security standards for electric scooters and e-rickshaws, including fully imported models, which have so far operated with limited cybersecurity oversight.

As part of the initiative, authorities are also considering banning mobile applications that can be used to exploit vulnerabilities in electric vehicles equipped with imported Chinese batteries. 

Officials from the Ministry of Heavy Industries and the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology have reportedly held discussions on addressing these security concerns.

"The software security vulnerability will be plugged," a senior official told ET, adding downloads of mobile apps that can disturb e2w and e3w are expected to be curbed.

According to officials, the decision to restrict such software stems from the difficulty of individually fixing every electric two-wheeler and three-wheeler already in circulation. The software reportedly takes advantage of weaknesses in battery troubleshooting systems, enabling unauthorised users to interfere with vehicle operations.

Another official said electric rickshaws and low-speed electric scooters were initially permitted to encourage wider adoption of electric mobility. However, this also resulted in a significant influx of low-cost imported electric vehicles from China.

"A call has been taken to ensure more safety and software safeguards in new e2w and e3w sold in the country," the official said, adding roadworthy certificates will be issued only to new vehicle models that are free from such vulnerabilities.

The upcoming regulations are also expected to cover completely imported electric vehicles sold in India, ensuring they comply with the same cybersecurity and software safety requirements as locally manufactured models.

U.S. Security Expert Sentenced for Aiding BlackCat Ransomware Gang

 

A cybersecurity professional has become the third U.S. security expert sentenced to prison for aiding a ransomware gang, marking a significant escalation in insider threat cases involving incident response firms. Angelo Martino, a 41-year-old from Florida, pleaded guilty to providing confidential victim information to the BlackCat/Alphv cybercrime group while ostensibly working to help companies negotiate with attackers. 

Modus operandi 

Martino worked as a ransomware negotiator for DigitalMint, a Chicago-based incident response company hired by victims to minimize damage and negotiate lower payouts. Instead, he fed critical details to BlackCat operators, including insurance policy limits and negotiation strategies, enabling the gang to maximize ransom demands across five separate incidents. Prosecutors revealed that Martino also assisted co-conspirators Kevin Martin and Ryan Goldberg in deploying BlackCat ransomware against U.S. victims for six months in 2023, effectively becoming an affiliate of the criminal group. The trio earned more than $1.2 million from a single victim during this period. 

Martino faces up to 20 years in prison at his sentencing hearing scheduled for July 2026, following guilty pleas from Martin and Goldberg in late 2025, who each received four-year sentences in April 2026. Federal authorities have already seized $10 million worth of assets from Martino as part of the investigation. The Justice Department emphasized that Martino's actions directly assisted ransomware actors and increased the financial burden on victim organizations, undermining trust in the cybersecurity incident response ecosystem. 

Lessons for the Industry 

This case highlights a concerning trend of cybersecurity professionals exploiting their trusted positions to facilitate cybercrime, raising questions about vetting processes and oversight within incident response firms. Organizations are now urged to conduct thorough background checks on security personnel and implement strict compliance measures to prevent similar insider threats. The BlackCat/Alphv gang, once a dominant ransomware outfit, has been linked to numerous high-profile attacks, and this collusion scheme demonstrates how criminal groups increasingly target the defenders themselves. 

As the cybersecurity field grapples with this breach of trust, the Martino case serves as a stark reminder that even those hired to protect can become perpetrators. Companies must strengthen internal controls, monitor negotiator activities, and ensure transparency in ransomware response engagements. With sentencing underway and more cases potentially emerging, the industry faces a critical moment to restore confidence in its ability to defend against evolving ransomware threats without internal compromise.

Injective Labs GitHub Compromise Distributes Malicious npm Package Targeting Crypto Wallet Keys

 

Cybersecurity researchers have detected a software supply chain attack in which threat actors compromised the Injective Labs SDK GitHub repository and utilized it to distribute a backdoored version of the npm package containing cryptocurrency wallet credentials stealing capabilities. Researchers at security company Socket have identified that the attackers distributed the malicious code in the @injectivelabs/sdk-ts version 1.20.21 after compromising the GitHub account of one of the trusted maintainers. 

The compromised package was published to the npm registry on July 8, 2026, and subsequently deprecated. Nevertheless, the distribution channel for the malicious artifacts remained available on GitHub at the time of publication. The attackers distributed the backdoored SDK to 17 other @injectivelabs packages, including the wallet, utility, networking, and crypto modules. Since the packages include various apps as dependencies, developers who did not directly install the SDK might also be affected. 

Unlike traditional supply chain malware that typically persists in the compromised software at installation time, the detected backdoor was not activated when the developers installed the package. Rather, the malicious code was designed to exfiltrate the cryptographic assets when the developers used the SDK’s wallet generation feature. 

Thus, the threat actors could hide the malicious payload’s presence by avoiding the use of suspicious scripts typically associated with malware. The detected malware consisted of modified cryptographic functions that replaced the legitimate implementation with the backdoor, which the attackers masked as a performance telemetry component. The additional function exfiltrated the cryptographic assets, including the mnemonic seed phrase and private key generation details, required to recreate the cryptocurrency wallet. 

Researchers noted that the malware persisted in the compromised repositories by sending the collected data to the remote server in aggregated fashion to avoid suspicion by grouping multiple exfiltration requests into one encrypted HTTPS session. The security analysts at OX Security stated that the detected threat was capable of intercepting the master recovery phrase used to seed cryptocurrency wallets. Since the mnemonic seed phrase gives the adversary full access to the wallet funds, threat actors could reproduce the cryptographic assets to gain unauthorized access to the blockchain assets. 

The malware’s distribution channel was compromised using the trusted publishing infrastructure and OpenID Connect (OIDC) publishing pipeline. The detected threat utilized the legitimate account of one of the maintainers, which implies that the attackers did not have to use supply chain malware or impersonate the project on a third-party registry. The developers who installed the affected package should switch to the latest version, 1.20.23, which has been released. 

The security analysts advise the developers to consider all private keys and mnemonic phrases generated with the compromised version of the code as compromised and take the appropriate actions to rotate the cryptographic assets. Moreover, the developers should review their project dependencies to ensure that they do not use the affected versions of the packages indirectly. 

The incident demonstrated how the threat actors could target the software supply chain to compromise the cryptocurrency ecosystem and gain unauthorized access to the crypto assets by compromising the open-source developer infrastructure.

Injective SDK Supply Chain Attack Exposed Developers to Cryptocurrency Wallet Theft


 

InjectiveLabs/SDK-TS, a widely used package, was briefly published on Node Package Manager (npm) as a malicious version after attackers gained access to a legitimate contributor's GitHub account, exposing developers to the theft of cryptocurrency wallet credentials. Several security researchers from Socket, Ox Security, and StepSecurity identified the supply chain attack as targeting Injective Labs' TypeScript/JavaScript SDK, which is used to develop applications based on Injective's blockchain.

The SDK is widely adopted by developers who create cryptocurrency wallets, decentralized finance (DeFi) applications, decentralized exchanges, trading bots, and payment platforms, with approximately 50,000 downloads per week on NPM. 

A significant security issue is the responsibility of the SDK when it comes to creating and importing cryptocurrency wallets, as it occupies a critical position in the development process. Developers and end users alike are particularly vulnerable to any compromise of the SDK because the wallet creation functions are crucial to the handling of users' mnemonic recovery phrases and private keys. 

Researchers have determined that hackers gained access to a legitimate contributor's GitHub account on June 8 and introduced malicious code, which was later released as version 1.20.21 for the @injectivelabs/sdk-ts package. Additionally, 17 additional Injective-related packages were referenced by the compromised release, resulting in a significant impact on downstream projects. According to security researchers, attackers compromised a legitimate maintainer's account after exploiting the trust-worthy GitHub publishing workflow of the project. 

As opposed to stealing an NPM publishing token or creating a fake package, the malicious version was distributed through the repository's normal release process, making the compromise appear genuine. Package maintainers detected the malicious activity within minutes, reverting the unauthorized changes and releasing a version that is free of malicious activity, 1.20.23. 

Nevertheless, systems that downloaded or updated the compromised package during the brief exposure window may still have been affected. In contrast to conventional malware that is executed during installation, the injected code is activated when developers create or import cryptocurrency wallets using SDK functions. 

When this was achieved, the malware captured private wallet keys and mnemonic seed sentences, encoded the information, and sent it via HTTP POST request to what appeared to be an official Injective Labs infrastructure endpoint in order to blend into normal network traffic. As a method of minimizing detection, the malware disguised its outbound communication as legitimate injective network traffic in order to prevent detection. 

By capturing multiple wallet secrets temporarily, encoding them, and transmitting them as a single request, the malicious activity was able to blend in with blockchain-related communications, avoiding detection. The malware, according to StepSecurity researchers, collected wallet secrets for approximately two seconds before bundling them into a single request to minimize suspicion while maximizing the amount of data stolen. 

In a recent report, Socket reported that 310 malicious packages had been downloaded before they were deprecated, but there is reportedly still availability of the associated malicious GitHub release artifacts. As a consequence of Ox Security's warning, the compromised SDK is dependent on 87 direct NPM packages, accounting for more than 112,000 cumulative downloads, illustrating the risk to a larger supply chain.

Researchers noted that even though the malicious payload was contained within @injectivelabs/sdk-ts, the compromised release affected 17 additional injective packages that depended on the infected SDK version. This could have resulted in developers installing the backdoored package unknowingly through normal project dependencies, thereby significantly expanding the attack's impact. 

It is advised that developers who suspect they may have installed the affected version transfer cryptocurrency assets immediately into new wallets, replace compromised private keys and seed phrases, and rotate any sensitive credentials stored within their development environment immediately. The incident underlines the growing threat posed by software supply chain attacks, particularly within the cryptocurrency ecosystem where a compromised development dependency may result in a significant financial loss to both developers and end users.

Due to the increasing sophistication of software supply chain attacks, organizations and developers must strengthen dependency verification, monitor package integrity, and respond quickly to compromised components so that credential theft and downstream compromise can be reduced.


QIZ Security Raises $17 Million to Expand Cryptographic Security and Post-Quantum Readiness Platform

 

Israeli cybersecurity startup QIZ Security has raised $17 million in seed funding to fuel the development of its cryptographic security management solution and post-quantum cryptographic (PQC) readiness platform. The Israeli cybersecurity company has seen rising demand for its service, which assists firms in inventorying their cryptography assets in preparation for the transition to post-quantum cryptography algorithms. 

The round was led by Bessemer Venture Partners and Merlin Ventures, with Evolution Equity Partners, Qbeat Ventures, Singtel Innov8, and Qino Cyber Capital also participating. The funding will support the company’s expansion and product development, with the company’s QIZ Security cryptographic governance platform’s research and development being the main focus. 

The startup was founded in 2022 by Ben Volkow, Lenny Ridel, and Itan Barmes, and its cybersecurity solution allows organizations to manage and inventory all cryptographic assets in on-premises, cloud, and hybrid environments without the need to scan their networks. Using industry standard APIs, QIZ Security’s cryptographic governance platform enables enterprises to detect and assess the risk of all certificates, encryption assets, security controls, protocols, cipher suites, and cryptographic keys. 

These details are automatically correlated to the organization’s applications and business processes discovered across hybrid cloud infrastructure environments. Moreover, the application detects vulnerabilities, weaknesses, and exposures to outdated encryption technologies that put enterprise data at risk in both transit and at rest. 

In addition, the company’s solution helps enterprises prioritize risks according to their technical and business significance and guides enterprises in responding to each identified risk. This empowers security operations and compliance teams to coordinate and accelerate activities and responses to cryptographic risks, ensuring that application owners and security stakeholders reduce exposure to business-specific threats. 

Modern cryptographic infrastructure governance is necessary for enterprises to inventory and better understand their cryptography assets, identify risks, and respond to them in a timely and cost-effective manner. With the upcoming quantum computing era, enterprises and government agencies are preparing to migrate their cryptographic infrastructure to post-quantum algorithms. This migration requires organizations to fully understand where their cryptography is, which encryption technologies put them at risk, and how best to respond. 

According to Chief Executive Officer Ben Volkow, enterprises are unable to effectively plan their transition to modern cryptography without gaining continuous visibility into their cryptography assets. Organizations need to take a step back and understand the overall state of cryptography in their IT environments to be prepared for upcoming changes. With the quantum era of computing arriving, businesses need to ensure they are taking the right steps now to safeguard their sensitive data. 

The news comes as governments and enterprises worldwide are beginning to acknowledge the need to inventory cryptographic assets to develop migration plans for post-quantum cryptography algorithms. Additionally, with increased concerns over the implications of quantum computing, multiple cybersecurity startups are positioning their services to assist enterprises in preparing their cryptography infrastructure for the transition to post-quantum cryptography algorithms.

OpenMandriva Accuses Former Contributor of Project Sabotage

 

OpenMandriva Linux is facing a serious internal security dispute after it said a former contributor abused administrative access to damage the project’s infrastructure. The alleged actions included deleting GitHub repositories and publishing an empty package that could have broken desktop systems for users of GNOME and COSMIC. 

According to the project, the problem did not begin with code but with conflict inside the community. OpenMandriva says an abusive incident in its Matrix chat led to one contributor being removed, which then triggered a chain of resignations and escalating anger among some members. 

The most damaging part of the incident involved repository access. Long-time maintainer AngryPenguin said the contributor had admin privileges because he had previously helped migrate and mirror project repositories to a private OneDev instance, and that access was later used to delete part of a repository the team had maintained for nearly 10 years. 

OpenMandriva also says the contributor pushed an empty package into its Cooker development branch. That package obsoleted the GNOME and COSMIC packages, meaning it could have caused real disruption for people relying on those desktop environments if the issue had not been caught quickly. 

The accused contributor, Davide Beatrici, rejects the sabotage allegation and says his goal was not to harm users or the distro itself. He argues that his actions were tied to a dispute over the project’s direction, including disagreement about OpenMandriva’s support for GNOME and COSMIC alongside KDE and LXQt. OpenMandriva says it is now restoring deleted repositories, repairing affected packages, and conducting a full audit to confirm that nothing else was altered. 

The project has also said the incident may meet the threshold of a criminal offense, though it has chosen not to pursue legal action at this stage. This case is a reminder that open-source projects do not only face technical threats from outside attackers. Internal access, trust, and governance can become just as dangerous when disputes turn personal and administrative privileges are misused.

AI Agents Built to Detect Malware Can Be Manipulated Into Running It


 

AI agents capable of identifying malicious software can be manipulated by the AI Now Institute to execute it, according to new research. The proof-of-concept attack, known as "Friendly Fire," demonstrates that autonomous AI coding agents, such as Claude Code from Anthropic and Codex from OpenAI, can be deceived into running malicious code while performing open-source security reviews. 

AI agents can approve and execute commands independently of the user without requiring user confirmation for every action, which is what this attack targets. Researchers contend that the vulnerability does not lie in the software version used by these agents, but rather in the way they interpret and react to instructions embedded within untrusted repositories rather than exploiting a software vulnerability. 

A comparison with conventional supply-chain attacks that hide malicious code within a repository was made by the researchers, who noted that when static analysis and manual review are performed, the repository itself can appear to be completely free of malicious code. By introducing the malicious payload at execution time, the AI agent follows embedded instructions, so traditional security tools cannot detect this technique.

By adding a seemingly harmless README.md instruction to an open-source project that recommended running a script entitled security.sh before submitting a pull request, attackers modified it. By launching a malicious binary hidden within a legitimate compiled Go file, the script silently executed on the host computer without triggering security warnings or approval prompts, allowing the malicious binary to execute on the system. 

According to the researchers, the attack is successful because the AI agent recognizes the instructions as a legitimate step in the process of installing software rather than an attempt to exploit the system maliciously. Once the recommended script has been executed, the payload will run under the same permissions that were provided for the developer or AI agent, potentially exposing credentials, environment variables, and other sensitive information. 

The procedure differs from previous prompt injection attacks, which relied on configuration files and often generated trust warnings, as this technique hides instructions inside standard documentation that is regularly read by developers and AI agents. It has been reported that both Claude Code and OpenAI Codex followed the embedded instructions during testing, while newer AI models executed the disguised binary upon detecting differences between the source file and the compiled executable. 

A laboratory proof-of-concept has been demonstrated, with no evidence of active exploitation in the field. In addition to excluding the malicious payload, the publicly released demonstration code does not attempt privilege escalation or lateral movement. These findings indicate that autonomous AI agents pose a greater challenge in terms of design rather than a problem that can be resolved by simply updating software. 

It is becoming more common for organizations to employ AI-powered coding assistants to review third-party software. Researchers recommend treating AI coding agents as privileged software, rather than simply assistants. Autonomous agents should not be permitted to execute commands on untrusted repositories, least-privilege access policies should be enforced, AI workflows should be isolated in sandboxed environments, and human approval should be required before running scripts or binaries recommended by project documentation. 

In accordance with the researchers, the issue is not related to any particular AI model, but a broader trust problem affecting autonomous coding assistants capable of executing shell commands. In addition to creating new attack surfaces if they are unable to reliably distinguish legitimate instructions from content controlled by the attacker, AI agents are becoming increasingly capable of cloning repositories, installing dependencies, and resolving setup issues independently. 

As autonomous AI systems are increasingly adopted in the software development and cybersecurity sectors, prompt injection attacks remain a major security threat. This study adds to a growing body of evidence that prompt injection attacks remain one of the greatest security risks. In light of the increasing autonomy of AI agents, organizations must balance automation and strong oversight in order to balance automation and security workflows. 

AI-driven attack techniques cannot be effectively countered until artificial intelligence (AI) systems can reliably discriminate between trusted and malicious instructions. Human verification and secure execution environments will therefore remain critical safeguards.