More than 31,000 banking passwords belonging to customers of Australia's four major banks—Commonwealth Bank, ANZ, NAB, and Westpac—have been stolen and are being traded on the dark web. Cybercriminals have also obtained nearly 100 staff login credentials from these banks, harvested over the past four years through malware-infected devices. This breach increases the risk of mass data theft and ransomware attacks targeting these financial institutions. The FBI has linked the phishing-as-a-service provider LabHost to enabling cybercriminals to impersonate over 200 organizations and steal personally identifiable information, credentials, and credit card data. The FBI recently released a list of malicious domains and indicators of compromise related to LabHost, highlighting the ongoing threat to banking security in Australia.
Cyber criminals have stolen the details of nearly 100 staff from the big four banks. The credentials were harvested from malware infected devices over the last four years and later sold on the dark web. #cyber #hack #banks #password #login #money #darkweb https://t.co/hPW3xuVIeo
Cybercriminals have stolen almost 100 staff logins from workers at Australia's biggest banks, putting those businesses at higher risk of mass data theft and ransomware attacks, according to cyber security researchers. https://t.co/dMndvbJXPT
LabHost, a phishing-as-a-service provider, enabled cyber criminals to impersonate over 200 organizations to steal PII, credentials & credit card info. Yesterday, FBI released a list of malicious domains and indicators of compromise associated with LabHost: https://t.co/Cu9EKPxFVe https://t.co/cVRXRjgusK