Another hacked broadcast in a hybrid war. Hunting forward as an exercise in threat intelligence collection and sharing. Cyber threats to the US midterm elections. Phishing for cryptocurrency. FakeCrack delivers a malicious payload to the unwary. Vacations are back. So is travel-themed phishbait. Ann Johnson from Microsoft shares insights on the trends she\u2019s tracking here at RSA. Johannes Ullrich brings highlights from his RSA conference panel discussion. And Emotet returns, in the company of some old familiar criminal collaborators.\n\nFor links to all of today's stories check out our CyberWire daily news briefing:\nhttps://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/11/111\n\nSelected reading.\nHacked Russian radio station broadcasts Ukrainian anthem (Washington Post)\xa0\nUkraine Successfully Defends Its Cyberspace While Russia Leans Heavily on Guns, Bombs (CNET)\nUkraine war: US cyber chief on Kyiv's advantage over Russia (Sky News)\nNSA Director Confirms Cyber Command 'Hunt Forward' Approach Applies to Russia (ClearanceJobs)\xa0\nExperts, NSA cyber director say ransomware could threaten campaigns in 2022 (CyberScoop)\nRansomware, botnets could plague 2022 midterms, NSA cyber director says (The Record by Recorded Future)\nHow Cyber Criminals Target Cryptocurrency (Proofpoint)\nCrypto stealing campaign spread via fake cracked software (Avast)\nThreat Actors Prepare Travel-Themed Phishing Lures for Summer Holidays (Hot for Security)\nEmotet Malware Returns in 2022 (Deep Instinct)\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices