Your devices may be revealing a lot more about your life than you realize.
During the Democratic National Convention in Chicago last month, we set out to find just how much data is floating around in the digital ether all around us. Armed with a fanny pack filled with radios—including a hot spot loaded with custom code developed by the digital rights nonprofit the Electronic Frontier Foundation and an Android phone armed with the data-revealing app Wiggle—WIRED reporters collected signals from nearly 300,000 devices in and around the DNC. This included more than 2,500 police body cameras, which effectively revealed how the Chicago Police Department deployed its officers at the protests. It also exposed new ways everyone—police and activists alike—can be surveilled via our gadgets.
Thanks to a legal dispute over content moderation, Elon Musk’s X has been blocked in Brazil for a week—mostly, away. The South American nation has some 20,000 internet service providers and lacks the centralized stranglehold over internet infrastructure that authoritarian countries like Iran have built. So when it comes to blocking an entire social network in Brazil, the whole thing is a bit of a mess.
Speaking of Musk-run companies, SpaceX is getting a big new customer for its Starlink satellite internet service: the United States Navy. In addition to providing sailors with a way to stay connected to friends and family while out at sea, Starlink is part of a large project to connect US warships wherever they are in the world.
Russia’s military intelligence agency, GRU, is known for having some of the most aggressive hacking teams on the planet. Now, it’s added a new one: GRU Unit 29155—a unit notorious for coup attempts, bombings, and other physical attacks—has a cyber warfare team of its own, according to the US and other Western governments. Dubbed Cadet Blizzard, the hacking team is said to have carried out attacks against Ukraine using destructive Whispergate malware, defaced Ukrainian government websites, and leaked information while posing as a hacktivist group. It all adds up to more evidence of the increasingly blurry lines between cyber and kinetic warfare.
Activists in Japan have been waging a pressure campaign against a company many people don’t know exists. The FANUC Corporation makes industrial robots, which are used for a wide variety of purposes. The activists claim this includes weapons manufacturing—specifically weapons used by Israel in its war in Gaza—and believe the company is violating export laws and its own policies. (FANUC denies both accusations.) Whatever the case, the controversy reveals how difficult it can be to untangle ethical issues from a global supply chain.
Health care companies are among the biggest targets for criminal hackers. But sometimes, the security issues come from the inside. Therapy sessions and other sensitive patient records were recently left exposed in a misconfigured database operated by Confidant Health, which provides addiction recovery care and other mental health services. The company says it secured the database immediately after a researcher alerted them to the fact that it was publicly accessible online, but it’s still a reminder of just how many of our deepest secrets can find their way into the open by accident.
Even those of you who do everything you can to secure those secrets can find yourself vulnerable—especially if you’re using a YubiKey 5 authentication token. The multifactor authentication devices can be cloned thanks to a cryptographic flaw that can’t be patched. The company has rolled out some mitigation measures—and the attack itself is relatively difficult to pull off. But it may be time to invest in a new dongle.
That’s not all, folks. Each week, we round up the privacy and security news we didn’t cover in depth ourselves. Click the headlines to read the full stories. And stay safe out there.
Hackers Threaten to Leak Planned Parenthood Data
At the end of August, cybercriminals from the ransomware group RansomHub appear to have hacked into the systems of Planned Parenthood’s Montana branch. The organization this week confirmed it had suffered from a “cybersecurity incident” on August 28 and said its staff immediately took parts of its network offline, reporting the incident to law enforcement.
Days after the incident took place, RansomHub claimed to be behind the attack, posting Planned Parenthood on its leak website. The criminal group said it would publish 93 GB of data. It is unclear what, if anything, the ransomware group has obtained, but Planned Parenthood clinics can hold a huge array of highly sensitive data about patients, including information on abortion appointments. (Around 400,000 Planned Parenthood patients in Los Angeles were impacted following a similar ransomware incident in 2021.)
In recent months, RansomHub has emerged as one of the most active ransomware-as-a-service groups, following the law enforcement disruption of LockBit. According to an FBI and Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency alert at the end of August, the group is “efficient and successful” and has stolen data from at least 210 victims since it formed in February. “The affiliates leverage a double-extortion model by encrypting systems and exfiltrating data to extort victims,” the alert said.
Nigerian Sextortion Scammers Sentenced to 17 Years After Teen Death
The Nigeria-based scammers known as the Yahoo Boys run almost every scam in the playbook—from romance scams to pretending to be FBI agents. Yet there's little-more devious than the increase in sextortion cases linked to the West African scammers. This week, Nigerian brothers Samuel Ogoshi and Samson Ogoshi were sentenced to more than 17 years in US jail for running sextortion scams, following their extradition earlier this year. It is the first time Nigerian scammers have been prosecuted for sextortion in the US, the BBC reported.
The Ogoshi brothers, who pleaded guilty in April, have been linked to the death of 17-year-old Jordan DeMay, who took his life six hours after he started talking to the scammers, who posed as a girl, on Instagram. The teenager had been duped into sending the brothers explicit images, and after he had done so, they threatened to post the images online unless he paid them hundreds of dollars. US prosecutors said the brothers sexually exploited and extorted more than 100 victims, with at least 11 of them being minors. There has been a huge spike in sextortion cases in recent years.
Kaspersky’s Banned US Business Sold
In June, the US Commerce Department banned the sale of Kaspersky’s antivirus tools over national security concerns about its links to the Russian government. (Kaspersky has, for years, denied connections). The firm later fired its workers and said it was closing its US business. This week, cybersecurity company Pango Group announced it is purchasing Kaspersky Lab’s US antivirus customers, according to Axios. This equates to around 1 million customers, who will be transitioned to Pango’s antivirus software Ultra AV. Ahead of the Kaspersky deal, parent company Aura also announced it was spinning out Pango Group into its own business. Pango’s president said customers would not need to take any action and that it would allow subscribers to continue to receive updates after September 29, when Kaspersky updates will stop.
Europe’s Encryption-Busting “Chat Control” Plans Return
For years, the EU has been trying to introduce new child protection laws that would require private chats to be scanned for child sexual abuse material—something that would potentially undermine encrypted messaging apps that provide everyday privacy to billions of people. The plans have been highly controversial and were shelved earlier this year. However, the proposed law, which has been dubbed “chat control,” reappeared in legislators’ in-trays this week. The Council of the EU, which is currently chaired by Hungary, wants to pass legislation by October, but reports say strong resistance to the plans still remain.