Known Exploited Vulnerabilities. Fools gold. Hacktivists come in both dissident and loyal varieties. Naming and shaming the shameless.

Published: Feb. 13, 2023, 9:15 p.m.

b"CISA adds to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog. Cl0p claims responsibility for GoAnywhere exploitation. Victims mine for gold; attackers use pig butchering tactics. Hacktivists disrupt Iranian television during Revolution Day observances. Killnet claims a DDoS attack against NATO earthquake relief efforts. CyberWire UK Correspondent Carole Theriault asks what can we learn from the recent Roomba privacy snafu? Rick Howard looks at first principles we considered along the way. And can you name and shame the shameless?\\n\\nFor links to all of today's stories check out our CyberWire daily news briefing:\\nhttps://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/12/29\\n\\nSelected reading.\\nCISA Adds Three Known Exploited Vulnerabilities to Catalog (CISA)\\xa0\\nGoAnywhere MFT Zero-Day Exploitation Linked to Ransomware Attacks (SecurityWeek)\\xa0\\nClop ransomware claims it breached 130 orgs using GoAnywhere zero-day (BleepingComputer)\\xa0\\nFool\\u2019s Gold: dissecting a fake gold market pig-butchering scam (Sophos)\\nIranian State TV Hacked During President's Speech on Revolution Day (HackRead)\\xa0\\nRussian hackers disrupt Turkey-Syria earthquake relief (The Telegraph)\\nHacking marketplace emerges from Killnet partnership, seeks pro-Russia donations (SC Media)\\nRussian Government evaluates the immunity to hackers acting in the interests of Russia (Security Affairs)\\nRussia\\u2019s Ransomware Gangs Are Being Named and Shamed (WIRED)"