source code theft
When the Backbone Breaks: Why the F5 Breach is a Five-Alarm Fire
Alan Shimel | | CISA directive, Cloud Security, code exfiltration, cyber resilience, Cybersecurity, Data breach, digital trust, enterprise security, F5 BIG-IP, F5 breach, government networks, Incident Response, infrastructure resilience, Infrastructure Security, it infrastructure, monoculture risk, Nation-state Attack, national security, Network Security, patch management, platform dependency, Resilience, security operations, source code theft, supply chain security, system compromise, Threat Intelligence, unpatched vulnerabilities, Vendor Risk, zero-day vulnerabilities
Alan warns that the F5 breach — involving stolen source code, unpatched vulnerabilities, and customer configurations — is a five-alarm crisis for digital infrastructure. The attack exposes national security risks, vendor concentration ...
Security Boulevard
Leaked Chats Show LAPSUS$ Stole T-Mobile Source Code
BrianKrebs | | A Little Sunshine, Amtrak, Apple, BitBucket, Breadcrumbs, Dan Goodin, Doxbin, Electronic Arts, emergency data request, Everlynn, Flashpoint, Genesis, Globant, Iqor, KT, Lapsus$, Lapsus$ Jobs, Michelin, Microsoft, Mobile Device Management, Mox, Ne'er-Do-Well News, Nvidia, Recursion Team, Russian Market, Samsung, SASCAR, SIM swapping, slack, source code theft, swatting, T-Mobile, T-Mobile Atlas, WhiteDoxbin
KrebsOnSecurity recently reviewed a copy of the private chat messages between members of the LAPSUS$ cybercrime group in the week leading up to the arrest of its most active members last month ...

