"Cylance" ransomware (no relation to Cylance). Update on the 3CX incident. The FSB's arrest of Evan Gershkovich. Ukrainian hacktivist social engineering in the hybrid war.

Published: April 3, 2023, 8:15 p.m.

"Cylance" the ransomware (with no relation to Cylance, the security company). An update on the 3CX incident. The FSB's arrest of a Wall Street Journal reporter. Simone Petrella from N2K Networks unpacks 2023 cybersecurity training trends. Deepen Desai from Zscaler has the latest on cloud security. And Hacktivists claim to have tricked wives of Russian combat pilots into revealing personal information.\n\nFor links to all of today's stories check out our CyberWire daily news briefing:\nhttps://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/12/63\n\nSelected reading.\n"Cylance" ransomware (no relation to Cylance). (CyberWire Pro)\nNew Cylance Ransomware Targets Linux and Windows, Warn Researchers (HackRead)\nNew Cylance Ransomware strain emerges, experts speculate about its notorious members (IT PRO)\xa0\nMore evidence links 3CX supply-chain attack to North Korean hacking group (Record)\n3CX supply chain attack: the unanswered questions (Computing)\n3CX Desktop App Compromised (CVE-2023-29059) (Fortinet Blog)\xa0\nEvan Gershkovich Loved Russia, the Country That Turned on Him (Wall Street Journal)\nThe Ukrainian hoax that revealed the Russian pilots who bombed Mariupol theatre (The Telegraph)\nUkrainian Hacktivists Trick Russian Military Wives for Personal Info (HackRead)\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices