A Nokia security breach has leaked source code from a third-party software development partner, exposing the company’s sensitive data, including keys and hardcoded credentials.
Microsoft is now saying that the Russian hackers accessed "some" source code. And while customer-facing systems were not breached, the hackers accessed some confidential emails to customers.
The web hosting company says that the group of hackers was able to access its network using stolen credentials, and planted malware and stole source code to give itself points of long-term access.
Okta is once again in trouble as the company's GitHub repositories have been hacked. There does not appear to be any impact to Okta clients, but the service source code appears to have been stolen in the breach.
Lapsus$ hackers repeatedly accessed T-Mobile's internal systems, including Atlas account management system capable of SIM swapping, and downloaded thousands of source code repositories.
Globant SAS confirmed a data breach affecting a "limited" number of customers after Lapsus$ hackers published 70GB of source code allegedly stolen from the company. Screenshots suggested that the leaked customer source code belonged to companies like Apple, Facebook and DHL.
Lapsus$ hackers compromised Microsoft's Azure DevOps Server, exfiltrated and published source code for the company's web infrastructure, websites, and mobile apps.