Tag: talos
5 articles

IIS server hijacking: Stunning Risky Threat
A Chinese‑speaking cybercrime group has been quietly hijacking Microsoft IIS servers to inject poisoned pages that hijack search results and steer real traffic to scams and affiliate schemes. If you run IIS sites, now’s the time to patch, lock down admin access, and add file‑integrity and content monitoring to stop stealthy SEO fraud before it ruins your reputation.

exposed Ollama servers: Risky Must-Have Security Fix
Cisco Talos found 1,100+ publicly exposed Ollama servers, creating easy paths for data theft, malicious model swaps, and other abuse. It’s a wake-up call to fix misconfigurations, enforce authentication, and make secure defaults the norm.

Cisco legacy flaw: Stunning Risky Exploits Exposed
Years after Cisco patched CVE-2018-0171, state-backed hackers are still exploiting the old Smart Install flaw to slip into networks that assumed retired gear was safe — a sharp reminder that “end-of-life” isn’t the same as “out of harm’s way.” Inventory your devices, disable legacy management features, and prioritize fixes or replacements before an old router becomes someone else’s backdoor.

Taiwanese web hosting Exclusive: Critical Espionage Risk
Imagine an invisible enemy living inside the servers that power your websites and email — Cisco Talos found a Chinese‑linked APT using a Taiwanese web host to intercept traffic, harvest credentials and stage persistent espionage. This supply‑chain breach is a wake‑up call: treat hosts as critical infrastructure and demand stronger controls, logging and incident guarantees now.

Taiwanese web host Critical: Exclusive Must-Have Fixes
A suspected Chinese state-backed crew quietly breached a Taiwanese web host, stealing credentials and planting backdoors to maintain months-long access — a stark reminder that compromising one trusted provider can expose dozens of downstream victims. Strengthening access controls, adopting zero-trust segmentation, and rotating credentials aren’t optional — they’re the best way to stop a single breach from becoming a widespread supply-chain disaster.