A new ransomware crew dubbed Codefinger targets AWS S3 buckets and uses the cloud giant's own server-side encryption with customer provided keys (SSE-C) to lock up victims' data before demanding a ...
Amazon is urging its customers to deploy additional security measures to secure S3 buckets following reports of ransomware ...
A new ransomware campaign encrypts Amazon S3 buckets using AWS's Server-Side Encryption with Customer Provided Keys (SSE-C) known only to the threat actor, demanding ransoms to receive the ...
A current ransomware campaign is targeting data dumps in Amazon S3 buckets. The attackers are using "Server-Side Encryption with Customer Provided Keys" (SSE-C), i.e. server-side encryption with ...
After accessing the buckets, they would use AWS server-side encryption with customer provided ... also using AWS S3 native features. Speaking to The Register, VP of services with the Halcyon ...
The Codefinger ransomware represents a new frontier in cyber threats, specifically targeting AWS S3 buckets. By exploiting ...
it could pose a systemic threat to organizations using Amazon S3 for critical data storage,” the report adds. The attacker leverages AWS’s Server-Side Encryption with Customer Provided Keys ...