The developer of the popular text editor Notepad++ said hackers associated with the Chinese government hijacked its software update mechanism to deliver tainted software to users for months.
Workforce monitoring software was abused in two cases of attempted ransomware attacks, researchers from Huntress found.
Morning Overview on MSN
Massive Chinese-linked hack hits popular open-source coding tool
A Chinese-linked cyberespionage group has pulled off a classic software supply-chain ambush, compromising a popular ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Wild supply-chain hack hits popular open-source coding app tied to China
A quiet compromise of a popular open-source coding editor has turned into one of the most unsettling software supply-chain ...
WASHINGTON, Oct 20 (Reuters) - A more than year-long digital intrusion into cybersecurity company F5 (FFIV.O), opens new tab, publicized last week and blamed on Chinese spies, has defenders across the ...
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