Skip to content

Davey Winder

delivering award-winning technology journalism since 1991

  • home
  • about me
  • follow me on mastodon
  • privacy policy
  • Toggle search form

Linux Security: Chinese State Hackers May Have Compromised ‘Holy Grail’ Targets Since 2012

Posted on April 7, 2020April 7, 2020 By Davey Winder

State-sponsored elite Chinese hackers have been successfully compromising Linux servers since 2012, according to a new threat intelligence analysis report

For the best part of the last decade, according to a new report from the BlackBerry research and intelligence team, advanced hackers working in the interests of China have been attacking Linux targets with a lot of success and little to no detection.

Click here to read complete article

Analysis Tags:China, Linux

Post navigation

Previous Post: Millions Of Windows 7, 8 And 10 Users Exposed To HP Security Vulnerabilities
Next Post: Cyber Attacks Against Hospitals Fighting COVID-19 Confirmed: INTERPOL Issues Purple Alert

Related Articles

Microsoft Outlook Warning: Critical New Email Exploit Triggers Automatically—Update Now Analysis
Is Bitwarden Doing Enough To Prevent Password Theft? New Research Reveals Attack Vector Analysis
Twitter Just Weakened Account Security For Almost 368 Million Users Analysis
Is ChatGPT a security threat? I asked, the AI bot replied. Analysis
Wordcloud with Cyber Security at centre No, PayPal Hasn’t Been Hacked: Yet Almost 35,000 Accounts Were Breached Analysis
You Need To Fix Google Chrome’s Mojo, Here’s How & Why Analysis

Categories

Post Archive

Tags

0day Analysis Android Apple Apps breach bug bounty Business Chrome crime Cybercrime Data Protection Encryption Enterprise Google Government hack Hackers Hacking healthcare industry iOS IoT iPhone Malware Microsoft News NHS Opinion passwords Phishing Privacy ransomware Research Russia Samsung threat intelligence Threatscape Update Vulnerabilites vulnerabilities Vulnerability Windows Windows 10 zero-day

Copyright © 2023 Davey Winder .

×
Cookies
We serve cookies. If you think that's ok, just click "Accept all". You can also choose what kind of cookies you want by clicking "Settings". Read our cookie policy
Settings Refuse all Accept all
Cookies
Choose what kind of cookies to accept. Your choice will be saved for one year. Read our cookie policy
  • Necessary
    These cookies are not optional. They are needed for the website to function.
  • Statistics
    In order for us to improve the website's functionality and structure, based on how the website is used.
  • Experience
    In order for our website to perform as well as possible during your visit. If you refuse these cookies, some functionality will disappear from the website.
  • Marketing
    By sharing your interests and behavior as you visit our site, you increase the chance of seeing personalized content and offers.
Save Refuse all Accept all
GDPR Cookie Policy