Federal authorities say an investigation into Chinese government hacking efforts has revealed a "broad and significant" cyberespionage campaign mounted by Beijing.
This company is suspected of providing the infrastructure necessary for Flax Typhoon, notably through its KRLab software. According to cybersecurity experts, this botnet could potentially be used to ...
Also in September, the FBI revealed that international cops disrupted a 260,000-device botnet controlled by a different ...
The group, known as Flax Typhoon, installed malware on more than 200,000 consumer devices – ranging from cameras to home and office routers – forming a vast botnet used for cybercrimes, including ...
The group Flax Typhoon, believed by experts to be backed ... They managed to disable malware on 260,000 devices. By June 2023 ...
Flax Typhoon actors also use living off the land techniques, and have compromised hundreds of internet-of-things (IOT) devices to create a botnet that they used to carry out attacks. The U.S ...
There’s also Flax Typhoon, which masquerades as a Beijing ... the Justice Department announced the FBI’s disruption of this worldwide botnet directed by Beijing. Most alarming of all ...
That operation disrupted a botnet of hundreds of U.S.-based small ... a separate Chinese government campaign, called Typhoon Flax, that targeted universities, government agencies and other ...