Tag: living off the land
7 articles

Bitdefender Exposes Hidden Attack Surface in Trusted Tools
Did you know that 84% of high-severity incidents involve the abuse of trusted tools, making them nearly invisible to traditional security measures? This shocking statistic highlights the alarming ease with which attackers can hide in plain sight, using legitimate tools against you.

Attackers Exploit Trusted Tools to Evade Cybersecurity Defenses
When the very tools you trust to keep your network safe are turned against you, who do you turn to? Imagine your familiar admin tools being hijacked by attackers, quietly compromising your defenses and leaving you vulnerable.

Bloody Wolf Expands in Central Asia Exclusive Danger
As Bloody Wolf expands across Central Asia, attackers are repurposing trusted remote‑administration tools to slip quietly into government networks and exfiltrate sensitive data. That shift from noisy attacks to stealthy intelligence gathering leaves smaller states scrambling to detect and respond.

Hackers Weaponize Windows Hyper-V in Stunning EDR Evasion
Think your EDR has you covered? Attackers are enabling Windows Hyper-V on compromised machines and spinning up tiny Alpine Linux VMs to run malware out of sight of host-based sensors—making virtualization the new stealth tactic defenders must watch for.

Security Leaders: Exclusive, Alarming Threat Evolution
Security leaders face an urgent choice: overhaul defenses now or accept a rising tide of risk. Threat evolution has accelerated — commodified crimeware, AI-driven automation and sprawling attack surfaces mean attackers are moving faster than most organizations can respond.

60% of Security Leaders: Stunning, Critical Threat Shift
Sixty percent of security leaders warn that threat actors are evolving too quickly for organizations to keep up. Commodified cybercrime, automation and an expanding attack surface are squeezing defenders’ time to detect, respond and contain — and the consequences are real.

Living Off The Land: Stunning, Risky Evasion Techniques
Attackers are quietly blending in by weaponizing legitimate — often obscure — system tools and even image files to evade detection, forcing defenders to rethink the assumption that “known-good” equals safe. To stay ahead, organizations must expand telemetry, tighten allowlisting, and hunt for suspicious misuse of everyday binaries before trust becomes a vulnerability.