Daixin Team claims ransomware attack against AirAsia. DraftKings users suffer credential harvesting and paycard theft. Assessing cyber risk in the US pharmaceutical industry. Killnet claims successes few others can discern. In Ukraine, kinetic attacks on IT infrastructure eclipse cyberattacks. Carole Theriault on digital echo chambers and what's in it for us. Nancy Wang from Forta's Alert Logic discusses how she is helping more young women get into the STEM field and leadership positions. Google seeks to render Cobalt Strike less useful to threat actors.\n\nFor links to all of today's stories check out our CyberWire daily news briefing:\nhttps://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/11/224\n\nSelected reading.\nDaixin Team claims AirAsia ransomware attack with five million customer records leaked (Tech Monitor)\nDaixin Ransomware Gang Steals 5 Million AirAsia Passengers' and Employees' Data (The Hacker News)\nDraftKings Users Hacked, Money In Account "Cashed Out" (Action Network)\nDraftKings says no evidence systems were breached following report of a hack (CNBC)\nAssessing cyber risk in the US pharmaceutical industry. (CyberWire)\nKillnet DDoS hacktivists target Royal Family and others (ComputerWeekly.com)\xa0\nUkraine Data Centers Became Physical Targets When Cyber Attacks Failed (Meritalk)\nMaking Cobalt Strike harder for threat actors to abuse (Google Cloud Blog)\nGoogle seeks to make Cobalt Strike useless to attackers (Help Net Security)\xa0\nGoogle Releases YARA Rules to Disrupt Cobalt Strike Abuse (Dark Reading)\nGoogle releases 165 YARA rules to detect Cobalt Strike attacks (BleepingComputer)\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices