A third-party data breach has leaked personal information, including government IDs, from the messaging app Discord after threat actors breached a customer support vendor.
Cyber Security
Cyber criminals, state-sponsored hackers and even the occasional disgruntled employee are constantly looking to gain unauthorized access for a variety of purposes: theft of money, cyber espionage, personal information for sale or for use in scams, and damage to critical infrastructure for just a few of the most common.
So how does an organization mitigate an entire world full of continual cyber attacks? Just as buildings have a number of necessary elements of physical security: access control, cameras, alarms and so on; there are similar key elements of cyber security that are absolutely vital for just about any modern business.
It starts with identifying and closing the most common doors that attackers use. For example, phishing attacks on employees are far and away the most common initial point of entry. The breach of even a low-level employee account can quickly turn into an escalation in access privileges and the ability to reach sensitive information. This is also true of smart devices, which are generally more poorly secured than computers and phones.
Daily fantasy sports and gambling platform DraftKings has confirmed that numerous user accounts were compromised following a series of credential stuffing attacks.
Security researchers at Wiz Research have discovered a critical vulnerability in the Redis in-memory database that could allow an attacker to gain remote code execution (RCE) capabilities and take over the host.
Both suspected state-backed foreign adversaries and more run-of-the-mill cyber criminals appear to mostly still be focused on using AI tools to make their existing operations faster, more efficient and more error-free. OpenAI's ChatGPT and other models appear to have fairly strong guardrails that are highly resistant to creation of malware or automation of attack operations.
North Korean hackers have now plundered $2 billion this year and an overall total of $6 billion in stolen crypto. The state-sponsored hacking teams have demonstrated creative means of penetrating crypto platforms and are responsible for at least 30 incidents in 2025, including a $1.46 billion theft from Bybit.
While AI and Quantum may be powerful tools, don’t get distracted. As organizations race to unlock their potential, it’s easy to lose sight of the basic truth: your cybersecurity foundation matters more than ever.
Open-source software company Red Hat has confirmed a security breach on one of its GitLab instances after a threat actor claimed to have stolen nearly 570 GB of data from across various repositories.
Japan’s top brewer, Asahi, has indefinitely suspended domestic ordering and shipment operations following a major system failure caused by a disruptive cyber attack.
A months-long data breach has exposed the personal information of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) workers.
A WestJet data breach has exposed the sensitive personal information of 1.2 million passengers after sophisticated hackers breached the airline’s internal systems, locking some users out of their accounts.










