Russia\u2019s invasion in Ukraine is still slow, but it\u2019s grown more brutal. Sanctions are beginning to hit Russia hard. The cyber phase of this hybrid war seems more informational than destructive, which is surprising. Big Tech has taken Ukraine\u2019s side, and some Russian companies face a tough balancing act. Our guest is Lavi Lazarovitz from CyberArk with predictions on supply chain security. Malek Ben Salem from Accenture on deploying effective deception systems. And ransomware continues to pester major corporations.\n\nFor links to all of today's stories check out our CyberWire daily news briefing:\nhttps://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/11/41\n\nSelected reading.\nUkraine at D+6: Shocking and awful. (The CyberWire)\nThe Fog of Cyberwar Descends on Ukraine and Russia (Bloomberg)\xa0\nRussian Electric Vehicle Chargers Hacked, Tell Users \u2018PUTIN IS A DICKHEAD\u2019 (Vice)\xa0\nWestern Sanctions Bite Russian Economy, but Pose Unpredictable Risks (Wall Street Journal)\xa0\nTargeted APT Activity: BABYSHARK Is Out for Blood (Huntress)\xa0\n5 New Vulnerabilities Discovered in PJSIP Open Source Library (JFrog)\xa0\nNvidia says hackers are leaking company data after ransomware attack (TechCrunch)\xa0\nInsurer Aon falls victim to a cyber attack (Computing)\xa0\nToyota to restart Japan production after cyberattack on supplier triggers one-day halt (The Edge Markets)\xa0\nCyberattack on Toyota's supply chain shuts all its factories in Japan for 24 hours (CNN) \nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices