Skip to main content

Tag: kimwolf

11 articles

Canada Arrests Kimwolf DDoS Botnet Operator in US-Led Crackdown

In a major cybercrime crackdown, a 23-year-old Canadian man, Jacob Butler, has been arrested and charged with operating the notorious Kimwolf DDoS botnet, which targeted vulnerable devices like digital photo frames and web cameras. If convicted, Butler faces up to 10 years in prison for aiding and abetting computer intrusion.

Analyst 207
Dort Unmasked: Alarming Rise of Kimwolf Botmaster Threat

Dort Unmasked: Alarming Rise of Kimwolf Botmaster Threat

Meet Dort, the mysterious mastermind behind the notorious Kimwolf botnet, a cybercrime powerhouse wreaking havoc on the internet. As the true identity and motives of this elusive threat actor remain shrouded in mystery, one thing is certain: their malicious activities have sent shockwaves through the cybersecurity landscape.

Analyst 207
Feds Disrupt Critical IoT Botnets Behind Alarming DDoS Attacks

Feds Disrupt Critical IoT Botnets Behind Alarming DDoS Attacks

The US Department of Justice has just scored a major win against cyber threats, dismantling four notorious IoT botnets responsible for alarming DDoS attacks that crippled websites and disrupted critical infrastructure. This bold move has taken down over three million hijacked devices, shielding millions of users from digital assaults.

Analyst 207
Kimwolf Botmaster Dort Exclusive Troubling Reveal

Kimwolf Botmaster Dort Exclusive Troubling Reveal

When researchers responsibly disclosed the flaw that seeded Kimwolf, the alleged operator Dort retaliated with DDoS, doxing and a false SWAT call—turning a technical disclosure into a personal crisis. It’s a gripping look at what happens when the defenders become the targets.

Analyst 207
Aisuru and Kimwolf Botnets: Exclusive Damaging Gains

Aisuru and Kimwolf Botnets: Exclusive Damaging Gains

Who wins when everyday gadgets become weapons? The Aisuru DDoS — drawing power from U.S. ISP networks — and Kimwolf’s rapid takeover of millions of unofficial Android TV boxes reveal how attackers and-market incentives have turned cheap devices into a lucrative botnet economy, forcing defenders into slow, surgical responses.

Analyst 207
Aisuru and Kimwolf Botnets: Exclusive Winners Revealed

Aisuru and Kimwolf Botnets: Exclusive Winners Revealed

Discover how Aisuru and Kimwolf turned everyday cheap devices—routers and gray‑market Android TV boxes—into a near‑unstoppable DDoS army that forced ISPs into impossible tradeoffs, revealing how lax supply chains and low‑cost hardware became attackers’ greatest advantage.

Analyst 207
Kimwolf Botnet Exclusive: Severe Local Network Threat

Kimwolf Botnet Exclusive: Severe Local Network Threat

If your router were a wolf at the door, would you still leave the latch open? The Kimwolf botnet has been hijacking routers to steal credentials, alter traffic, and keep persistent access—update firmware, remove WAN management, and change default passwords now.

Analyst 207
Kimwolf Botnet Exclusive: Dangerous Local Network Alert

Kimwolf Botnet Exclusive: Dangerous Local Network Alert

Think your home network is a locked room? Researchers warn the Kimwolf botnet is quietly replacing the lock—compromising routers and IoT devices to build stealthy footholds for DDoS, data theft, or lateral attacks.

Analyst 207
Aisuru and Kimwolf Botnets Exclusive: Stunning Devastation

Aisuru and Kimwolf Botnets Exclusive: Stunning Devastation

Get an exclusive look at the Aisuru and Kimwolf botnets and the stunning devastation they’ve caused—an eye-opening read for anyone concerned about today’s cyberthreat landscape.

Analyst 207
Aisuru and Kimwolf Botnets Exclusive: Damaging Findings

Aisuru and Kimwolf Botnets Exclusive: Damaging Findings

Get the inside scoop on the Aisuru and Kimwolf botnets—exclusive findings reveal how they spread, the damage theyre causing, and smart steps to protect your systems.

Analyst 207
Kimwolf Botnet: Exclusive Warning on Dangerous Local Threat

Kimwolf Botnet: Exclusive Warning on Dangerous Local Threat

The Kimwolf botnet is quietly hijacking routers and management consoles to turn whole local networks into persistent, hard-to-detect attack platforms. If you haven’t checked firmware, disabled remote admin, or changed default credentials lately, now’s the time—this is an active, targeted campaign.

Analyst 207