SpyCloud says in a new report that 76% of employees at the largest companies in the world still reuse their passwords across work and personal accounts, presenting hacking opportunities for attackers, Help Net Security reports. The group further reveals that more than 543 million breach assets tied to Fortune 1000 employees and 25.9 million business account credentials are currently accessible to cybercriminals. Employees as high as in the executive levels have been found to secure their personal accounts behind the same credentials used in their corporate accounts, leaving corporate networks and systems vulnerable to unauthorized access when those personal accounts are breached. Among the group’s findings, the telecommunications sector has the highest average number of leaked credentials, at 552,601 per company, while 13,897 personal or corporate systems owned by workers in the technology sector have apparently been infected with credential-stealing malware. Meanwhile, the most widely used credentials among employees remain “123456” and “password” despite repeated warnings about their weakness.
Jill Aitoro leads editorial for SC Media, and content strategy for parent company CyberRisk Alliance. She 20 years of experience editing and reporting on technology, business and policy.
New proposed commercial surveillance regulations are poised to be unveiled by the Federal Trade Commission in the next few months amid concerns of misuse and data security gaps, reports The Record, a news site by cybersecurity firm Recorded Future.
North Korean state-sponsored advanced persistent threat operations Lazarus Group, Kimsuky, and Andariel were noted by South Korea's National Police Agency to have targeted several South Korean defense industry entities since late 2022 in a bid to obtain intelligence regarding defense technologies, reports Security Affairs.