GEORGIA, USA — The Georgia Department of Human Services has hired hackers to help find weak loopholes in its systems.
They are calling it the "bug bounty" which, according to the company, offers money to "ethical hackers" for finding bugs in their system. Hackers would then report the bugs to the agency to help them strengthen their systems.
'ChatGPT is the new crypto': Meta warns hackers are exploiting interest in the AI chatbot | CNN ...
Hackers have seized on worldwide interest in the artificial intelligence-powered tool ChatGPT in an effort to break into people's devices, Facebook owner Meta revealed in a security report Wednesday, equating the phenomenon to the surge in cryptocurrency scams.
"From a bad actor's perspective, ChatGPT is the new crypto," Guy Rosen, Meta's chief information security officer, told reporters, meaning scammers have quickly moved to exploit interest in the technology.
Hackers Exploiting 5-year-old Unpatched Vulnerability in TBK DVR Devices
Threat actors are actively exploiting an unpatched five-year-old flaw impacting TBK digital video recording (DVR) devices, according to an advisory issued by Fortinet FortiGuard Labs.
The vulnerability in question is CVE-2018-9995 (CVSS score: 9.8), a critical authentication bypass issue that could be exploited by remote actors to gain elevated permissions.
Microsoft says Iranian hackers combine influence ops with hacking for maximum impact | CyberScoop
Iranian state-aligned hackers are increasingly deploying information operations to amplify cyberattacks and gain maximum exposure for their efforts to support the regime’s agenda in the Middle East and against Western targets, Microsoft’s Digital Threats Analysis Center said Tuesday .
Fears pro-Russian hackers could ruin Eurovision by disrupting the broadcasts | Daily Mail Online
Ministers fear pro-Russian hackers could disrupt Eurovision by silencing the song contest next week.
Experts from the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) were called in after the Government and Eurovision organisers raised concerns that the competition could become a digital front of the Ukraine war, The Times reports.
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