Midnight Blizzard

‘Russia’ Breaches TeamViewer — ‘No Evidence’ Billions of Devices at Risk
Richi Jennings | | 2-factor authentication, 2fa, 2FA/MFA, APT29, Cozy Bear, CozyCar, CozyDuke, Dark Halo, enshittification, MFA, mfa protection, Midnight Blizzard, multi-factor, multi-factor authenication, Multi-Factor Authentication, Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA), multi-factor-auth, NOBELIUM, Nobeliumm, Office Monkeys, Russia, russia hacker, russia-based, russian, SB Blogwatch, SolarWinds, SolarWinds Vulnerability, solarwinds-hack, StellarParticle, SVR, TeamViewer, The Dukes, two-factor, two-factor athentication, Two-Factor Humor, two-factor-authentication.2fa, UNC2452, YTTRIUM
SolarWinds hackers strike again: Remote access service hacked—by APT29, says TeamViewer ...
Security Boulevard

CISA: Russian Hackers Stole Emails Between U.S. Agencies and Microsoft
The U.S. cybersecurity agency in an emergency directive is ordering affected agencies to address risks stemming from the attack ...
Security Boulevard
How ITDR Could Have Helped Microsoft in the Midnight Blizzard Hack
Rezonate | | identity management, Identity provider, ITDR, Market, Microsoft, Midnight Blizzard, research, security, Technical
Identity-based attacks are on the rise, but they can be prevented with the right identity threat detection and response (ITDR) measures. As winter crept in last year, so did identity threat actors ...

Behind The Breach: Microsoft Breach by Russian Hackers
Farah Iyer | | APT29, Data breach, Data breaches, FEATURED, identity threat detection and response, ITDR, Microsoft breach, Midnight Blizzard, NOBELIUM, SaaS Security, SaaS security posture, saas security solutions, Security Guidance, solarwinds-hack, SSPM
On 12 January 2024, Microsoft disclosed a critical breach carried out by Russian state-sponsored group, Midnight Blizzard. The threat actor used a password-spraying attack to gain unauthorized access to Microsoft Corporation’s Office ...

Russia Hacked Microsoft Execs — SolarWinds Hackers at it Again
Richi Jennings | | APT29, azure, Azure cloud, Cozy Bear, lateral attack, lateral movement, LateralMovement, Microsoft, Microsoft 365, Midnight Blizzard, password spraying, Russia, Russian Cyber War, Russian cybercrime, Russian FSB, Russian hacker, Russian hackers, Russian hacking, Russian Threat Actors, SB Blogwatch
AKA APT29: Midnight Blizzard / Cozy Bear makes it look easy (and makes Microsoft look insecure) ...
Security Boulevard