惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
博客园_首页
H
Help Net Security
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
GbyAI
GbyAI
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
D
Docker
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
Jina AI
Jina AI
雷峰网
雷峰网
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
C
Cisco Blogs
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
F
Full Disclosure
Y
Y Combinator Blog
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
G
Google Developers Blog
量子位
K
Kaspersky official blog
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
The Cloudflare Blog
A
About on SuperTechFans
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
T
Tenable Blog
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
H
Heimdal Security Blog
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
W
WeLiveSecurity
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
F
Fortinet All Blogs
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
小众软件
小众软件
V
V2EX
爱范儿
爱范儿

The Hacker News

SystemBC C2 Server Reveals 1,570+ Victims in The Gentlemen Ransomware Operation 22 BRIDGE:BREAK Flaws Expose Thousands of Lantronix and Silex Serial-to-IP Converters Ransomware Negotiator Pleads Guilty to Aiding BlackCat Attacks in 2023 5 Places where Mature SOCs Keep MTTR Fast and Others Waste Time NGate Campaign Targets Brazil, Trojanizes HandyPay to Steal NFC Data and PINs No Exploit Needed: How Attackers Walk Through the Front Door via Identity-Based Attacks Google Patches Antigravity IDE Flaw Enabling Prompt Injection Code Execution CISA Adds 8 Exploited Flaws to KEV, Sets April-May 2026 Federal Deadlines SGLang CVE-2026-5760 (CVSS 9.8) Enables RCE via Malicious GGUF Model Files ⚡ Weekly Recap: Vercel Hack, Push Fraud, QEMU Abused, New Android RATs Emerge & More Why Most AI Deployments Stall After the Demo Anthropic MCP Design Vulnerability Enables RCE, Threatening AI Supply Chain Researchers Detect ZionSiphon Malware Targeting Israeli Water, Desalination OT Systems Vercel Breach Tied to Context AI Hack Exposes Limited Customer Credentials $13.74M Hack Shuts Down Sanctioned Grinex Exchange After Intelligence Claims Mirai Variant Nexcorium Exploits CVE-2024-3721 to Hijack TBK DVRs for DDoS Botnet Three Microsoft Defender Zero-Days Actively Exploited; Two Still Unpatched Google Blocks 8.3B Policy-Violating Ads in 2025, Launches Android 17 Privacy Overhaul NIST Limits CVE Enrichment After 263% Surge in Vulnerability Submissions Operation PowerOFF Seizes 53 DDoS Domains, Exposes 3 Million Criminal Accounts Apache ActiveMQ CVE-2026-34197 Added to CISA KEV Amid Active Exploitation Newly Discovered PowMix Botnet Hits Czech Workers Using Randomized C2 Traffic ThreatsDay Bulletin: Defender 0-Day, SonicWall Brute-Force, 17-Year-Old Excel RCE and 15 More Stories [Webinar] Eliminate Ghost Identities Before They Expose Your Enterprise Data The Hacker News The Hacker News Obsidian Plugin Abuse Delivers PHANTOMPULSE RAT in Targeted Finance, Crypto Attacks UAC-0247 Targets Ukrainian Clinics and Government in Data-Theft Malware Campaign n8n Webhooks Abused Since October 2025 to Deliver Malware via Phishing Emails Actively Exploited nginx-ui Flaw (CVE-2026-33032) Enables Full Nginx Server Takeover April Patch Tuesday Fixes Critical Flaws Across SAP, Adobe, Microsoft, Fortinet, and More Deterministic + Agentic AI: The Architecture Exposure Validation Requires Microsoft Issues Patches for SharePoint Zero-Day and 168 Other New Vulnerabilities OpenAI Launches GPT-5.4-Cyber with Expanded Access for Security Teams New PHP Composer Flaws Enable Arbitrary Command Execution — Patches Released Google Adds Rust-Based DNS Parser into Pixel 10 Modem to Enhance Security AI-Driven Pushpaganda Scam Exploits Google Discover to Spread Scareware and Ad Fraud Mirax Android RAT Turns Devices into SOCKS5 Proxies, Reaching 220,000 via Meta Ads Analysis of 216M Security Findings Shows a 4x Increase In Critical Risk (2026 Report) 108 Malicious Chrome Extensions Steal Google and Telegram Data, Affecting 20,000 Users ShowDoc RCE Flaw CVE-2025-0520 Actively Exploited on Unpatched Servers CISA Adds 6 Known Exploited Flaws in Fortinet, Microsoft, and Adobe Software JanelaRAT Malware Targets Latin American Banks with 14,739 Attacks in Brazil in 2025 FBI and Indonesian Police Dismantle W3LL Phishing Network Behind $20M Fraud Attempts ⚡ Weekly Recap: Fiber Optic Spying, Windows Rootkit, AI Vulnerability Hunting and More Your MTTD Looks Great. Your Post-Alert Gap Doesn't North Korea's APT37 Uses Facebook Social Engineering to Deliver RokRAT Malware OpenAI Revokes macOS App Certificate After Malicious Axios Supply Chain Incident CPUID Breach Distributes STX RAT via Trojanized CPU-Z and HWMonitor Downloads Adobe Patches Actively Exploited Acrobat Reader Flaw CVE-2026-34621 Citizen Lab: Law Enforcement Used Webloc to Track 500 Million Devices via Ad Data GlassWorm Campaign Uses Zig Dropper to Infect Multiple Developer IDEs Browser Extensions Are the New AI Consumption Channel That No One Is Talking About Google Rolls Out DBSC in Chrome 146 to Block Session Theft on Windows Marimo RCE Flaw CVE-2026-39987 Exploited Within 10 Hours of Disclosure Backdoored Smart Slider 3 Pro Update Distributed via Compromised Nextend Servers EngageLab SDK Flaw Exposed 50M Android Users, Including 30M Crypto Wallet Installs UAT-10362 Targets Taiwanese NGOs with LucidRook Malware in Spear-Phishing Campaigns ThreatsDay Bulletin: Hybrid P2P Botnet, 13-Year-Old Apache RCE and 18 More Stories The Hidden Security Risks of Shadow AI in Enterprises Adobe Reader Zero-Day Exploited via Malicious PDFs Since December 2025 Bitter-Linked Hack-for-Hire Campaign Targets Journalists Across MENA Region New Chaos Variant Targets Misconfigured Cloud Deployments, Adds SOCKS Proxy Masjesu Botnet Emerges as DDoS-for-Hire Service Targeting Global IoT Devices APT28 Deploys PRISMEX Malware in Campaign Targeting Ukraine and NATO Allies Shrinking the IAM Attack Surface through Identity Visibility and Intelligence Platforms (IVIP) Anthropic's Claude Mythos Finds Thousands of Zero-Day Flaws Across Major Systems N. Korean Hackers Spread 1,700 Malicious Packages Across npm, PyPI, Go, Rust Iran-Linked Hackers Disrupt U.S. Critical Infrastructure by Targeting Internet-Exposed PLCs Russian State-Linked APT28 Exploits SOHO Routers in Global DNS Hijacking Campaign [Webinar] How to Close Identity Gaps in 2026 Before AI Exploits Enterprise Risk Docker CVE-2026-34040 Lets Attackers Bypass Authorization and Gain Host Access Over 1,000 Exposed ComfyUI Instances Targeted in Cryptomining Botnet Campaign The Hidden Cost of Recurring Credential Incidents New GPUBreach Attack Enables Full CPU Privilege Escalation via GDDR6 Bit-Flips China-Linked Storm-1175 Exploits Zero-Days to Rapidly Deploy Medusa Ransomware Flowise AI Agent Builder Under Active CVSS 10.0 RCE Exploitation; 12,000+ Instances Exposed Iran-Linked Password-Spraying Campaign Targets 300+ Israeli Microsoft 365 Organizations DPRK-Linked Hackers Use GitHub as C2 in Multi-Stage Attacks Targeting South Korea Multi-OS Cyberattacks: How SOCs Close a Critical Risk in 3 Steps ⚡ Weekly Recap: Axios Hack, Chrome 0-Day, Fortinet Exploits, Paragon Spyware and More How LiteLLM Turned Developer Machines Into Credential Vaults for Attackers Qilin and Warlock Ransomware Use Vulnerable Drivers to Disable 300+ EDR Tools BKA Identifies REvil Leaders Behind 130 German Ransomware Attacks 36 Malicious npm Packages Exploited Redis, PostgreSQL to Deploy Persistent Implants Fortinet Patches Actively Exploited CVE-2026-35616 in FortiClient EMS China-Linked TA416 Targets European Governments with PlugX and OAuth-Based Phishing Microsoft Details Cookie-Controlled PHP Web Shells Persisting via Cron on Linux Servers UNC1069 Social Engineering of Axios Maintainer Led to npm Supply Chain Attack Why Third-Party Risk Is the Biggest Gap in Your Clients' Security Posture New SparkCat Variant in iOS, Android Apps Steals Crypto Wallet Recovery Phrase Images Drift Loses $285 Million in Durable Nonce Social Engineering Attack Linked to DPRK Hackers Exploit CVE-2025-55182 to Breach 766 Next.js Hosts, Steal Credentials Cisco Patches 9.8 CVSS IMC and SSM Flaws Allowing Remote System Compromise ThreatsDay Bulletin: Pre-Auth Chains, Android Rootkits, CloudTrail Evasion & 10 More Stories Researchers Uncover Mining Operation Using ISO Lures to Spread RATs and Crypto Miners The State of Trusted Open Source Report WhatsApp Alerts 200 Users After Fake iOS App Installed Spyware; Italian Firm Faces Action Apple Expands iOS 18.7.7 Update to More Devices to Block DarkSword Exploit CERT-UA Impersonation Campaign Spread AGEWHEEZE Malware to 1 Million Emails
$285 Million Drift Hack Traced to Six-Month DPRK Social Engineering Operation
The Hacker News · 2026-04-05 · via The Hacker News

Drift has revealed that the April 1, 2026, attack that led to the theft of $285 million was the culmination of a months-long targeted and meticulously planned social engineering operation undertaken by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) that began in the fall of 2025.

The Solana-based decentralized exchange described it as "an attack six months in the making," attributing it with medium confidence to a North Korean state-sponsored hacking group dubbed UNC4736, which is also tracked under the cyptonyms AppleJeus, Citrine Sleet, Golden Chollima, and Gleaming Pisces.

The threat actor has a history of targeting the cryptocurrency sector for financial theft since at least 2018. It's best known for the X_TRADER/3CX supply chain breach in 2023 and the $53 million hack of decentralized finance (DeFi) platform Radiant Capital in October 2024.

"The basis for this connection is both on-chain (fund flows used to stage and test this operation trace back to the Radiant attackers) and operational (personas deployed across this campaign have identifiable overlaps with known DPRK-linked activity)," Drift said in a Sunday analysis.

In an assessment published in late January 2026, cybersecurity company CrowdStrike described Golden Chollima as an offshoot of Labyrinth Chollima that's primarily geared towards cryptocurrency theft by targeting small fintech firms in the U.S., Canada, South Korea, India, and Western Europe.

"The adversary typically conducts smaller-value thefts at a more consistent operational tempo, suggesting responsibility for ensuring baseline revenue generation for the DPRK regime," CrowdStrike said. "Despite improving trade relations with Russia, the DPRK requires additional revenue to fund ambitious military plans that include constructing new destroyers, building nuclear-powered submarines, and launching additional reconnaissance satellites."

In at least one incident observed in late 2024, UNC4736 delivered malicious Python packages through a fraudulent recruitment scheme to a European fintech company. Upon gaining access, the threat actor moved laterally to the victim's cloud environment to access IAM configurations and associated cloud resources, and ultimately diverted cryptocurrency assets to adversary-controlled wallets.

How the Drift Attack Likely Unfolded

Drift, which is working with law enforcement and forensic partners to piece together the sequence of events that led to the hack, said it was the target of a "structured intelligence operation" that required months of planning.

Cybersecurity

Starting in or about fall 2025, individuals posing as a quantitative trading company approached Drift contributors at a major cryptocurrency conference and international crypto conferences under the pretext of integrating the protocol. It has since emerged that this was a deliberate approach, where members of this trading group approached and built rapport with specific Drift contributors at various major industry conferences that took place in several countries over a period of six months.

"The individuals who appeared in person were not North Korean nationals," Drift explained. "DPRK threat actors operating at this level are known to deploy third-party intermediaries to conduct face-to-face relationship-building."

"They were technically fluent, had verifiable professional backgrounds, and were familiar with how Drift operated. A Telegram group was established upon the first meeting, and what followed were months of substantive conversations around trading strategies and potential vault integrations. These interactions are typical of how trading firms interact and onboard with Drift."

Then, sometime between December 2025 and January 2026, the group onboarded an Ecosystem Vault on Drift, a step that required filling out a form with strategy details. As part of this process, the individuals are said to have engaged with multiple contributors, asking them "detailed and informed product questions," while depositing more than $1 million of their own funds.

This, Drift said, was a calculated move designed to build a functioning operational presence inside the Drift ecosystem, with integration conversations continuing with the contributors through February and March 2026. This included sharing links for projects, tools, and applications that the company claimed to be developing.

The possibility that these interactions with the trading group may have acted as the initial infection pathway assumed significance in the wake of the April 1 hack. But as Drift revealed, their Telegram chats and malicious software had been deleted right around the time the attack took place.

It's suspected that there may be two primary attack vectors -

  • One contributor may have been compromised after cloning a code repository shared by the group as part of efforts to deploy a frontend for their vault.
  • A second contributor was persuaded into downloading a wallet product via Apple's TestFlight to beta test the app.

The repository-based intrusion vector is assessed to have involved a malicious Microsoft Visual Studio Code (VS Code) project that weaponizes the "tasks.json" file to automatically trigger the execution of malicious code upon opening the project in the IDE by using the "runOn: folderOpen" option.

It's worth noting that this technique has been adopted by North Korean threat actors associated with the Contagious Interview campaign since December 2025, prompting Microsoft to introduce new security controls in VS Code versions 1.109 and 1.110 to prevent unintended execution of tasks when opening a workspace.

"The investigation has shown so far that the profiles used in this third-party targeted operation had fully constructed identities including employment histories, public-facing credentials, and professional networks," Drift said. "The people Drift contributors met in person appeared to have spent months building profiles, both personal and professional, that could withstand scrutiny during a business or counterparty relationship."

North Korea's Fragmented Malware Ecosystem

The disclosure comes as DomainTools Investigations (DTI) disclosed that DPRK's cyber apparatus has evolved into a "deliberately fragmented" malware ecosystem that's mission-driven, operationally resilient, and resistant to attribution efforts. This shift is believed to be a response to law enforcement actions and intelligence disclosures about North Korean hacking campaigns.

"Malware development and operations are increasingly compartmentalized, both technically and organizationally, ensuring that exposure in one mission area does not cascade across the entire program," DTI said. "Crucially, this model also maximizes ambiguity. By separating tooling, infrastructure, and operational patterns along mission lines, the DPRK complicates attribution and slows defender decision-making."

Financial operations malware track

To that end, DomainTools noted that DPRK's espionage-oriented malware track is chiefly associated with Kimsuky, while Lazarus Group spearheads efforts to generate illicit revenue for the regime, transforming into a "central pillar" for sanctions evasion. The third track revolves around deploying ransomware and wiper malware for purposes of strategic signaling and drawing attention to its capabilities. This disruptive branch is associated with Andariel.

Social Engineering Behind Contagious Interview and IT Worker Fraud

Social engineering and deception continue to be the main catalyst for many of the intrusions that have been attributed to DPRK threat actors. This includes the recent supply chain compromise of the hugely popular npm package, Axios, as well as ongoing campaigns like Contagious Interview and IT worker fraud.

Contagious Interview is the moniker assigned to a long-running threat in which the adversary approaches prospective targets and tricks them into executing malicious code from a fake repository as part of an assessment. Some of these efforts have used weaponized Node.js projects hosted on GitHub to deploy a JavaScript backdoor called DEV#POPPER RAT and an information stealer known as OmniStealer.

On the other hand, DPRK IT worker fraud refers to coordinated efforts by North Korean operatives to land remote freelance and full-time roles at Western companies using stolen identities, AI-generated personas, and falsified credentials. Once hired, they generate steady revenue and leverage the access to introduce malware and siphon proprietary and sensitive information. In some cases, the stolen data is used to extort money from businesses.

Cybersecurity

The state-sponsored program deploys thousands of technically skilled workers in countries like China and Russia, who connect to company-issued laptops hosted at laptop farms in the U.S. and elsewhere. The scheme also relies on a network of facilitators to receive work laptops, manage payroll, and handle logistics. These facilitators are recruited through shell companies.

The process starts with recruiters who identify and screen potential candidates. Once accepted, the IT workers enter an onboarding phase, where facilitators assign identities and profiles, and guide them through resume updates, interview preparation, and initial job applications. The threat actors also work with collaborators to complete hiring requirements for full-time opportunities where strict identity verification policies are enforced.

As noted by Chainalysis, cryptocurrency plays a central role in funneling a majority of the wages generated by these IT worker schemes back to North Korea while evading international sanctions.

"The cycle is constant and unending. North Korean IT workers understand that, sooner or later, they will either quit or be dismissed from any given role," Flare and IBM X-Force said in a report last month. "As a result, they are continually shifting between jobs, identities, and accounts – never remaining in one position or using a single persona for very long."

New evidence unearthed by Flare has since revealed the campaign's efforts to actively recruit individuals from Iran, Syria, Lebanon, and Saudi Arabia, with at least two Iranians receiving formal offer letters from U.S. employers. There have been more than 10 instances of Iranian nationals being recruited by the regime.

Facilitators have also been found to use LinkedIn to hire separate people from Iran, Ireland, and India, who are then coached to land the jobs. These individuals, called callers or interviewers, get on the phone with American hiring managers, pass technical interviews, and impersonate the real or fake Western personas curated by them. When a caller fails an interview, the facilitator reviews the recording and provides feedback.

"North Koreans are deliberately targeting U.S. defense contractors, cryptocurrency exchanges, and financial institutions," Flare said. "While the primary motivations appear to be financial, the deliberate targeting evidenced from their documents indicates that there may be other objectives at play as well."

"The DPRK is not simply deploying its own nationals under false identities. It is building a multinational recruitment pipeline, drawing skilled developers from Iran, Syria, Lebanon, and Saudi Arabia into an infrastructure designed to infiltrate U.S. defense contractors, cryptocurrency exchanges, financial institutions, and enterprises of every size. The recruits are real software engineers, paid in cryptocurrency, coached through interviews, and slotted into fabricated Western personas."

Found this article interesting? Follow us on Google News, Twitter and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post.