Author: Robert Timlick

  • Iranian Infy APT Resurfaces with New Malware Activity After Years of Silence

    Iranian Infy APT Resurfaces with New Malware Activity After Years of Silence

    Threat hunters have discerned new activity associated with an Iranian threat actor known as Infy (aka Prince of Persia), nearly five years after the hacking group was observed targeting victims in Sweden, the Netherlands, and Turkey.
    “The scale of Prince of Persia’s activity is more significant than we originally anticipated,” Tomer Bar, vice president of security research at SafeBreach, said
  • U.S. DOJ Charges 54 in ATM Jackpotting Scheme Using Ploutus Malware

    U.S. DOJ Charges 54 in ATM Jackpotting Scheme Using Ploutus Malware

    The U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) this week announced the indictment of 54 individuals in connection with a multi-million dollar ATM jackpotting scheme.
    The large-scale conspiracy involved deploying malware named Ploutus to hack into automated teller machines (ATMs) across the U.S. and force them to dispense cash. The indicted members are alleged to be part of Tren de Aragua (TdA, Spanish for
  • The Hidden Risk of Integrations: A Checklist for Vetting Third-Party Apps (API Security)

    The Hidden Risk of Integrations: A Checklist for Vetting Third-Party Apps (API Security)

    Modern businesses depend on third-party apps for everything from customer service and analytics to cloud storage and security. But this convenience comes with risk, every integration introduces a potential vulnerability. In fact, 35.5% of all recorded breaches in 2024 were linked to third-party vulnerabilities. 

    The good news? These risks can be managed. This article highlights the hidden dangers of third-party API integrations and provides a practical checklist to help you evaluate any external app before adding it to your system.

    Why Third-Party Apps Are Essential in Modern Business 

    Simply put, third-party integrations boost efficiency, streamline operations, and improve overall productivity. Most businesses do not create each technology component from scratch. Instead, they rely on third-party apps and APIs to manage everything from payments to customer support, analytics, email automation, chatbots, and more. The aim is to speed up development, cut costs, and gain access to features that might take months to build internally. 

    What Are the Hidden Risks of Integrating Third-Party Apps? 

    Adding third-party apps to your systems invites several risks, including security, privacy, compliance, and operational and financial vulnerabilities.

    Security Risks

    Third-party integrations can introduce unexpected security risks into your business environment. A seemingly harmless plugin may contain malware or malicious code that activates upon installation, potentially corrupting data or allowing unauthorized access. Once an integration is compromised, hackers can use it as a gateway to infiltrate your systems, steal sensitive information, or cause operational disruptions.

    Privacy and Compliance Risks

    Even with strong contractual and technical controls, a compromised third-party app can still put your data at risk. Vendors may gain access to sensitive information and use it in ways you never authorized, such as storing it in different regions, sharing it with other partners, or analyzing it beyond the agreed purpose. For instance, misuse of a platform could lead to violations of data protection laws, exposing your organization to legal penalties and reputational damage.

    Operational and Financial Risks

    Third-party integrations can affect both operations and finances. If an API fails or underperforms, it can disrupt workflows, cause outages, and impact service quality. Weak credentials or insecure integrations can be exploited, potentially leading to unauthorized access or costly financial losses.

    What to Review Before Integrating a Third-Party API 

    Before you connect any app, take a moment to give it a careful check-up. Use the checklist below to make sure it’s safe, secure, and ready to work for you.

    1. Check Security Credentials and Certifications: Make sure the app provider has solid, recognized security credentials, such as ISO 27001, SOC 2, or NIST compliance. Ask for audit or penetration test reports and see if they run a bug bounty program or have a formal vulnerability disclosure policy. These show the vendor actively looks for and addresses security issues before they become a problem.
    2. Confirm Data Encryption: You might not be able to inspect a third-party app directly, but you can review their documentation, security policies, or certifications like ISO 27001 or SOC. Ask the vendor how they encrypt data both in transit and at rest, and make sure any data moving across networks uses strong protocols like TLS 1.3 or higher.
    3. Review Authentication & Access: Make sure the app uses modern standards like OAuth2, OpenID Connect, or JWT tokens. Confirm it follows the principle of least privilege, giving users only the access they truly need. Credentials should be rotated regularly, tokens kept short-lived, and permissions strictly enforced.
    4. Check Monitoring & Threat Detection: Look for apps that offer proper logging, alerting, and monitoring. Ask the vendor how they detect vulnerabilities and respond to threats. Once integrated, consider maintaining your own logs to keep a close eye on activity and spot potential issues early.
    5. Verify Versioning & Deprecation Policies: Make sure the API provider maintains clear versioning, guarantees backward compatibility, and communicates when features are being retired.
    6. Rate Limits & Quotas: Prevent abuse or system overload by confirming the provider supports safe throttling and request limits.
    7. Right to Audit & Contracts: Protect yourself with contractual terms that allow you to audit security practices, request documentation, and enforce remediation timelines when needed.
    8. Data Location & Jurisdiction: Know where your data is stored and processed, and ensure it complies with local regulations.
    9. Failover & Resilience: Ask how the vendor handles downtime, redundancy, fallback mechanisms, and data recovery, because no one wants surprises when systems fail.
    10. Check Dependencies & Supply Chain: Get a list of the libraries and dependencies the vendor uses, especially open-source ones. Assess them for known vulnerabilities to avoid hidden risks.

    Vet Your Integrations Today 

    No technology is ever completely risk-free, but the right safeguards can help you manage potential issues. Treat third-party vetting as an ongoing process rather than a one-time task. Continuous monitoring, regular reassessments, and well-defined safety controls are essential.

    If you want to strengthen your vetting process and get guidance from experts with experience building secure systems, we can help. Our team has firsthand experience in cybersecurity, risk management, and business operations, and we provide practical solutions to help you protect your business and operate more safely.

    Build your confidence, tighten your integrations, and ensure that every tool in your stack works for you rather than against you. Call us today and take your business to the next level.

    Featured Image Credit

    This Article has been Republished with Permission from The Technology Press.

  • Russia-Linked Hackers Use Microsoft 365 Device Code Phishing for Account Takeovers

    Russia-Linked Hackers Use Microsoft 365 Device Code Phishing for Account Takeovers

    A suspected Russia-aligned group has been attributed to a phishing campaign that employs device code authentication workflows to steal victims’ Microsoft 365 credentials and conduct account takeover attacks.
    The activity, ongoing since September 2025, is being tracked by Proofpoint under the moniker UNK_AcademicFlare.
    The attacks involve using compromised email addresses belonging to government
  • Cracked Software and YouTube Videos Spread CountLoader and GachiLoader Malware

    Cracked Software and YouTube Videos Spread CountLoader and GachiLoader Malware

    Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed details of a new campaign that has used cracked software distribution sites as a distribution vector for a new version of a modular and stealthy loader known as CountLoader.
    The campaign “uses CountLoader as the initial tool in a multistage attack for access, evasion, and delivery of additional malware families,” Cyderes Howler Cell Threat Intelligence
  • WatchGuard Warns of Active Exploitation of Critical Fireware OS VPN Vulnerability

    WatchGuard Warns of Active Exploitation of Critical Fireware OS VPN Vulnerability

    WatchGuard has released fixes to address a critical security flaw in Fireware OS that it said has been exploited in real-world attacks.
    Tracked as CVE-2025-14733 (CVSS score: 9.3), the vulnerability has been described as a case of out-of-bounds write affecting the iked process that could allow a remote unauthenticated attacker to execute arbitrary code.
    “This vulnerability affects both the
  • Nigeria Arrests RaccoonO365 Phishing Developer Linked to Microsoft 365 Attacks

    Nigeria Arrests RaccoonO365 Phishing Developer Linked to Microsoft 365 Attacks

    Authorities in Nigeria have announced the arrest of three “high-profile internet fraud suspects” who are alleged to have been involved in phishing attacks targeting major corporations, including the main developer behind the RaccoonO365 phishing-as-a-service (PhaaS) scheme.
    The Nigeria Police Force National Cybercrime Centre (NPF–NCCC) said investigations conducted in collaboration with
  • New UEFI Flaw Enables Early-Boot DMA Attacks on ASRock, ASUS, GIGABYTE, MSI Motherboards

    New UEFI Flaw Enables Early-Boot DMA Attacks on ASRock, ASUS, GIGABYTE, MSI Motherboards

    Certain motherboard models from vendors like ASRock, ASUSTeK Computer, GIGABYTE, and MSI are affected by a security vulnerability that leaves them susceptible to early-boot direct memory access (DMA) attacks across architectures that implement a Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) and input–output memory management unit (IOMMU).
    UEFI and IOMMU are designed to enforce a security
  • China-Aligned Threat Group Uses Windows Group Policy to Deploy Espionage Malware

    China-Aligned Threat Group Uses Windows Group Policy to Deploy Espionage Malware

    A previously undocumented China-aligned threat cluster dubbed LongNosedGoblin has been attributed to a series of cyber attacks targeting governmental entities in Southeast Asia and Japan.
    The end goal of these attacks is cyber espionage, Slovak cybersecurity company ESET said in a report published today. The threat activity cluster has been assessed to be active since at least September 2023.
  • HPE OneView Flaw Rated CVSS 10.0 Allows Unauthenticated Remote Code Execution

    HPE OneView Flaw Rated CVSS 10.0 Allows Unauthenticated Remote Code Execution

    Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) has resolved a maximum-severity security flaw in OneView Software that, if successfully exploited, could result in remote code execution.
    The critical vulnerability, assigned the CVE identifier CVE-2025-37164, carries a CVSS score of 10.0. HPE OneView is an IT infrastructure management software that streamlines IT operations and controls all systems via a