Recently leaked malware source code isn’t Carbanak
The recently leaked source code actually isn’t Carbanak — it’s another advanced financial malware family. And the leak will likely have a huge ripple effect.
13 articles
The recently leaked source code actually isn’t Carbanak — it’s another advanced financial malware family. And the leak will likely have a huge ripple effect.
What’s wrong with ATMs’ security and what should the banks do about it
Fraudsters portfolio updated: now they’ve learnt to steal money from banks directly. How did it happen?
New variants of the “legendary” banking Trojan Carbanak are making the rounds on the Web, so far noticed in Europe and the United States.
In the new installment of our explosive hit series “Infosec news” you’ll find: the breach of Bugzilla, Carbanak is coming back and Turla uses Level-God hard to track techniques to hide servers.
Quite a few new APT campaigns were discovered in the last year and a half. Here is a glimpse of a potential landslide in the making with two of them.
Kaspersky Security Analyst Summit brought forward a lot of things to think about, and in this post we’ll pick a handful (well, actually quite a lot) of twitter highlights from those two days of security-related keynotes and presentations.
Brian Donohue and Chris Brook of Threatpost discuss Kaspersky Lab’s Security Analyst Summit, which took place last week in Cancun, Mexico
On February 16th and 17th in Cancun, Mexico, the Fourth annual Kaspersky Security Analyst Summit took place. Here are several chosen moments from the keynotes presented there.
Kaspersky Lab has discovered an ultra-massive money-stealing campaign codenamed Carbanak APT with total losses summing up to $1 bn so far.
The Carbanak APT group managed to steal a total of $1 bln from dozens of banks worldwide