Microsoft is publishing for the first time our research into a subgroup within the Russian state actor Seashell Blizzard and ...
A subgroup of the Russia-linked Seashell Blizzard is tasked with broad initial access operations to sustain long-term ...
Microsoft found that Russian state actor Seashell Blizzard has deployed an initial access subgroup to gain persistent access ...
Microsoft released a lengthy blog post detailing Seashell Blizzard's cyberattacks all over the world, as well as methods to ...
A subgroup of the Russian state-sponsored hacking group APT44, also known as 'Seashell Blizzard' and 'Sandworm', has been ...
Since early 2024, Seashell Blizzard has expanded its range of targets from beyond Eastern Europe to include the US and UK, ...
Sandworm’s BadPilot campaign exploits eight security flaws to infiltrate global critical sectors, enabling persistent access ...
The operation, attributed to the notorious Russian threat actor Seashell Blizzard, has compromised high-profile targets in ...
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Russia's Sandworm caught snarfing credentials, data from American and Brit orgsSandworm, the offensive cyber operations group that works for the Russian Military Intelligence Unit 74455 (GRU), has ...
Microsoft Threat Intelligence Center discovered an active and successful device code phishing campaign by a threat actor we ...
Russian-backed Seashell Blizzard relies on "BadPilot" subgroup for initial exploits, researchers say
Microsoft researchers uncover the “BadPilot campaign,” a threat subgroup working with the Russian state actor Seashell Blizzard in a multi-year global hacking campaign.
The conversation centers around Seashell Blizzard, a threat actor also known as Sandworm or APT-44, which has been active since at least 2013. Recently, Seashell Blizzard has resumed using ...
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