Strontium
Germany Warns Russia: Hacking Will Have Consequences
Richi Jennings | | Annalena Baerbock, APT28, Fancy Bear, Germany, GRU, Microsoft Outlook, Microsoft Outlook bug, Military Unit 26165, NATO, outlook, outlook hack, Russia, Russia-Ukraine, russia-ukraine conflict, SB Blogwatch, Strontium, Ukraine, Ukraine-Russia War, Ukraine/European Security
War of the words: Fancy Bear actions are “intolerable and unacceptable,” complains German foreign minister Annalena Baerbock ...
Security Boulevard
‘But His Emails!’ — Ukrainian Hackers Hack Hillary Hacker
Richi Jennings | | APT28, DCLeaks, Democratic National Committee, democrats, DNC, DNC hack, Fancy Bear, FBI, GRU, hillary clinton, Russia, SB Blogwatch, Sergey Aleksandrovich Morgachev, Strontium, Ukraine
Beware Fancy Bears Bearing Gifts: Confirms DCLeaks caper was by APT28. Also that APT28 is Russian military unit ...
Security Boulevard
Microsoft Takes Down Russia’s Strontium Allies Attacking Ukraine
Need additional evidence that private organizations are playing a defining role in curbing and preventing nation-state cyberattacks? Just look at the actions Microsoft recently took to disrupt Russian GRU-connected Strontium’s attacks on ...
Security Boulevard
Fancy Bear Targeting Anti-Doping Organizations Ahead of 2020 Olympic Games
David Bisson | | Fancy Bear, IT Security and Data Protection, Latest Security News, olympics, Strontium
Fancy Bear has begun targeting anti-doping authorities and sporting organizations ahead of the 2020 Summer Olympic Games. On October 28, the Microsoft Threat Intelligence Center revealed that it had identified at least ...
8/27/19 – Dtex, Insider Threat, Privacy News: Microsoft APT28 Shut Downs Highlight Insider Threat Risks, Tech Heavyweights Seek to Sidestep California Privacy Law
Dtex Systems | | APT28, California Consumer Privacy Act, Cecilia Kang, Christy Wyatt, Cybersecurity, Dtex, facebook, Fancy Bear, GDPR, google, Harris Poll, IBM, insider threat, Microsoft, Privacy, Russia, Strontium, The New York Times
Last week, Microsoft reported that it detected six internet domains that were set up by cyberattack groups associated with the Russian government. According to Microsoft: Last Week, Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit (DCU) ...

