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Don't pay Vect a ransom - your data's likely already wiped out

28 April 2026 at 18:36

'Full recovery is impossible for anyone, including the attacker'

Organizations hit by the wave of Trivy and LiteLLM supply-chain compromises that paid Vect in hopes of recovering their data likely did not get much back, according to Check Point Research. That's because the ransomware Vect uses isn't actually ransomware at all, but a wiper that destroys any file larger than 128KB.…

Ongoing supply-chain attack 'explicitly targeting' security, dev tools

27 April 2026 at 23:33

Vendor confirms repo data exposure after Lapsus$ claims source code, secrets dump

Software security testing outfit Checkmarx has become the latest organization caught up in an ongoing attack on security-tool providers. The biz said data posted online appears to have come from one of its GitHub repositories after the Lapsus$ extortion crew claimed to have dumped the company’s source code, secrets, and other sensitive data.…

Burglar alarm biz burgled: ADT confirms cyber intrusion after ShinyHunters extortion attempt

27 April 2026 at 11:34

Security giant says attackers grabbed 'limited set' of data. Crooks claim 10 million records

A home security biz getting digitally burgled is not a great look - but that's exactly where ADT finds itself. The company has confirmed a cyber intrusion following an extortion attempt by the ShinyHunters crew, which claims to have made off with more than 10 million records.…

Anthropic's magic code-sniffer: More Swiss cheese than cheddar, for now

27 April 2026 at 08:30

AI vuln-hunter finds what humans taught it to find. Funny that

Opinion In retrospect, calling it Mythos made it a hostage to fortune. Anthropic may have hoped that the name implied its AI code security model had mythical god-like powers, but there's an alternate reading. Another definition for Mythos is a set of beliefs of obscure origin which are incompatible with reality.…

AI's not going to kill open source code security

26 April 2026 at 09:28

Cal.com considers AGPL a license to drill, but not everyone feels that way

Opinion Cal.com has closed its commercial codebase, abandoning years of AGPL-3.0 licensing in a move that has alarmed the developer community that helped build it and sent ripples through the broader open source world.…

Received β€” 24 April 2026 ⏭ The Register - Security
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