Latest news as of 2/19/2026, 10:46:48 AM
Dark Reading
To help counter crime, today's organizations require a cyber-defense strategy that incorporates the mindset of the cybercriminal.
Bleeping Computer
A new vulnerability in ServiceNow, dubbed Count(er) Strike, allows low-privileged users to extract sensitive data from tables to which they should not have access. [...]
Bleeping Computer
MFA Authenticator apps aren't cutting it anymore. Attackers are bypassing legacy MFA with fake sites and real-time phishing. Token Ring and BioStick stop them cold—with fingerprint-bound hardware. Learn more from Token. [...]
Dark Reading
Though the victims list on its site has since been taken down, the group plans on leaking the rest of the files stolen from its victims.
Dark Reading
From data fog to threat clarity: Automating security analytics helps security teams stop fighting phantoms and respond to what matters.
Dark Reading
Startup Tumeryk’s State of AI Trust finds Google Gemini Pro 2.5 as the most trustworthy with ChatGPT-4 Mini a close second, while DeepSeek and Alibaba Qwen scoring lowest.
The Hacker News
Run by the team at workflow orchestration and AI platform Tines, the Tines library features over 1,000 pre-built workflows shared by security practitioners from across the community - all free to import and deploy through the platform’s Community Edition. A recent standout is a workflow that handles malware alerts with CrowdStrike, Oomnitza, GitHub, and PagerDuty. Developed by Lucas Cantor at
The Hacker News
The U.S. Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) on Tuesday sanctioned a member of a North Korean hacking group called Andariel for their role in the infamous remote information technology (IT) worker scheme. The Treasury said Song Kum Hyok, a 38-year-old North Korean national with an address in the Chinese province of Jilin, enabled the fraudulent operation by using
The Register
Plus: Confirms less serious data points like meal preferences also leaked Qantas says that when cybercrooks attacked a "third party platform" used by the airline's contact center systems, they accessed the personal information and frequent flyer numbers of the "majority" of the circa 5.7 million people affected.…
The Hacker News
A Chinese national has been arrested in Milan, Italy, for his alleged links to a state-sponsored hacking group known as Silk Typhoon and for carrying out cyber attacks against American organizations and government agencies. The 33-year-old, Xu Zewei, has been charged with nine counts of wire fraud and conspiracy to cause damage to and obtain information by unauthorized access to protected