CD Projekt Red confirmed that employee and game-related data appears to be floating around the cyber-underground, four months after a hack on the Witcher and Cyberpunk 2077 developer.
Airlines are warned to scour networks for traces of the campaign, likely the work of APT41, lurking in networks.
There were more than 80 million login credentials for sale, used to inflict over $200 million in losses in the U.S. alone.
Raft of other proprietary game data and related software and developer kits also pilfered in the unspecified attack, which the company is investigating.
The group, known for masquerading as various APT groups, is back with a spate of attacks on U.S. companies.
Google has patched its Chrome browser, fixing one critical cache issue and a second bug being actively exploited in the wild.
The desktop conferencing IoT gadget allows remote attackers to install all kinds of malware and move laterally to other parts of enterprise networks.
Misconfigured dashboards are yet again at the heart of a widespread, ongoing cryptocurrency campaign squeezing Monero and Ethereum from Kubernetes clusters.
Emerging malware is lurking in Steam profile images.
The decision to pay the ransom demanded by the cybercriminal group was to avoid any further issues or potential problems for its customers, according to the company’s CEO.