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  • Chicago ‘Splatatouille’ was probably a squirrel, say researchers | Animals

    Chicago ‘Splatatouille’ was probably a squirrel, say researchers | Animals

    With a front paw outstretched and its tail at an angle, the creature that fell on to wet concrete in Chicago left quite the memento mori.

    Now, researchers say they have unmasked the identity of the victim, revealing the famous “rat hole” was…

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  • The simple activity found to help mothers with post natal depression

    The simple activity found to help mothers with post natal depression

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  • The “BlackSuit Blitz” at a Global Equipment Manufacturer

    The “BlackSuit Blitz” at a Global Equipment Manufacturer

    Unit 42 recently assisted a prominent manufacturer who experienced a severe ransomware attack orchestrated by Ignoble Scorpius, the group that distributes BlackSuit ransomware. This incident serves as a reminder of how a seemingly minor issue — in this case, a single set of compromised VPN credentials — can lead to a full-scale corporate crisis with tremendous impact to the bottom line.

    The Attack: A Combination of Reconnaissance and Ransomware

    The Ignoble Scorpius attack began with a voice phishing (vishing) call. The attacker impersonated the company’s IT help desk and tricked an employee into entering their legitimate VPN credentials on a phishing site.

    With these credentials, the threat actor gained initial network access and immediately escalated their privileges. They executed a DCSync attack on a domain controller to steal highly privileged credentials, including a key service account. Using these compromised credentials, they moved laterally across the network using RDP and SMB, employing tools like Advanced IP Scanner and SMBExec to map the network and identify high-value targets.

    The attackers established persistence by deploying AnyDesk and a custom RAT on a domain controller, configured as a scheduled task to survive reboots. (It is important to note that threat actors often abuse and take advantage of legitimate products like AnyDesk for malicious purposes. We are not implying that the legitimate product is flawed.)

    The attackers then compromised a second domain controller, extracting the NTDS.dit database containing all user password hashes, and exfiltrated over 400 GB of data using a renamed rclone utility. To cover their tracks, the threat actors deployed CCleaner to erase forensic evidence before unleashing the final blow: BlackSuit ransomware, orchestrated through Ansible, simultaneously encrypted hundreds of virtual machines across approximately 60 VMware ESXi hosts, disrupting operations across the entire infrastructure.

    How Unit 42 Helped

    When Unit 42 was engaged, we helped the client expand their Cortex XDR deployment from 250 to over 17,000 endpoints, providing enterprise-wide visibility to track the attacker’s every move. We also leveraged Cortex XSOAR to automate containment actions, stopping the attack from spreading further.

    Our investigation identified the full attack path and led to some critical recommendations including:

    • Network Security: Replace end-of-life Cisco ASA firewalls with Next-Generation Firewalls (NGFW), implement network segmentation, and restrict administrative access to critical systems (like DCs and ESXi hosts) to dedicated management VLANs.
    • Identity and Access Management: Enforce MFA for all remote access, disable NTLM or require EPA, rotate all credentials, and restrict service accounts from being used for interactive logons like RDP.
    • Endpoint and Server Hardening: Block EFSRPC using RPC filters to prevent PetitPotam/DCSync attacks, deploy and maintain a fully patched XDR solution on all endpoints, and have a strict policy for removing EOL systems.
    • Logging and Monitoring: Enhance log retention to 90-plus days for critical sources (ESXi, firewalls, Nasuni), ensure logs are properly parsed for effective analysis, and enable features like AWS CloudTrail log validation.

    The Outcome

    The client was able to achieve several key outcomes:

    • Financial demand negated: We successfully negated the $20 million ransom demand, ensuring the client paid no ransom.
    • Expanded visibility: The engagement expanded the client’s endpoint visibility from 250 to over 17,000, creating a robust foundation for future security operations.
    • Strategic guidance: We provided bespoke, strategic after-incident guidance, helping the client fortify their defenses and prevent future attacks.
    • Continuous monitoring: Following the incident, the client onboarded Unit 42 Managed Detection and Response (MDR) services for continuous monitoring, ensuring they are better prepared to handle future threats.

    The Takeaway

    This attack serves as a stark reminder that even a single compromised credential can create a domino effect, leading to a catastrophic security breach. The swift and sophisticated tactics of threat actors like Ignoble Scorpius and their use of BlackSuit ransomware demonstrate the critical need for a proactive and multi-layered defense strategy.

    By implementing MFA on all remote access points, and integrating robust endpoint visibility, automated containment, and expert guidance, organizations can not only disrupt an attack in progress but also shore up their defenses to prevent future incidents. Most importantly, investments in proactive security assessments have shown to pay dividends that far outweigh the costs of operational and financial impact of a full-scale ransomware attack.

    Interested in learning more about the latest attack trends? If so, take a look at our 2025 Unit 42 Global Incident Response Report, which distills the most critical findings based on our direct experience responding to real-world cyberattacks at over 500 organizations across 38 countries.

    Additional Resources

    About Unit 42

    Unit 42 strengthens your team with the tools and expertise needed to stay ahead of threats like BlackSuit ransomware and protect your business. With our proven strategies and insights from thousands of engagements, we’ll help your team handle the toughest situations with confidence.

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  • Samsung offers $100 instant deal to new XR headset users ahead of Unpacked

    Samsung offers $100 instant deal to new XR headset users ahead of Unpacked

    Kerry Wan/ZDNET

    Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google.


    ZDNET’s key takeaways

    • Samsung has confirmed that the next Unpacked will happen on October 21.
    • The event will showcase its Project Moohan XR headset, and possibly other…

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  • Samsung officially teases Moohan headset launch for next week

    Samsung officially teases Moohan headset launch for next week

    Samsung is finally about to reveal more details about its Project Moohan mixed reality headset. The company just announced a new “Worlds Wide Open” Galaxy event that will take place on October 21st at 10PM ET, where it’s promising to reveal…

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  • Samsung will introduce its Android XR headset at a Galaxy event on October 21

    Samsung will introduce its Android XR headset at a Galaxy event on October 21

    Samsung is back with another event this fall, which it has dubbed Worlds Wide Open. The company said that it will use this opportunity to officially unveil its Android XR headset, internally known as Project Moohan. The livestreamed event will…

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  • Britney Spears claps back at Kevin Federline’s new accusations

    Britney Spears claps back at Kevin Federline’s new accusations

    Photo: Britney Spears breaks silence on Kevin Federline’s vile accusations

    Britney Spears is firing back at her ex-husband Kevin Federline following his explosive new memoir.

    As reported by PEOPLE Magazine, the pop…

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  • NVIDIA DGX Spark Arrives for World’s AI Developers

    NVIDIA DGX Spark Arrives for World’s AI Developers

    SANTA CLARA, Calif., Oct. 14, 2025 — NVIDIA has announced it will start shipping NVIDIA DGX Spark, the world’s smallest AI supercomputer. AI workloads are quickly outgrowing the memory and software capabilities of the PCs, workstations…

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  • The Welcoming Turtle | Wildlife Photographer of the Year

    The Welcoming Turtle | Wildlife Photographer of the Year

    Jake Stout‘s Image

    Jake Stout (USA) encounters a snapping turtle as it glides over lake vegetation in New Hampshire.

    Common snapping turtles have a fearsome reputation.

    But Jake finds them to be calm and inquisitive.

    He’s photographed them in this…

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  • Cat Amongst the Flamingos | Wildlife Photographer of the Year

    Cat Amongst the Flamingos | Wildlife Photographer of the Year

    Dennis Stogsdill‘s Image

    Dennis Stogsdill (USA) witnesses a caracal hunting a lesser flamingo in the Serengeti National Park, Tanzania.

    Dennis had been keeping an eye out for wild cats such as servals for several days when a call came over the…

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