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Threat actors with ties to North Korea have been linked to a fresh set of malicious npm packages that masquerade as Rollup polyfill tooling to facilitate remote access and data theft. According to JFrog, the packages “rollup-packages-polyfill-core” and “rollup-runtime-polyfill-core” mimic the legitimate “rollup-plugin-polyfill-node” project, down to the description, repository metadata, and
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A previously undocumented threat actor known as Armored Likho has been attributed to cyber attacks targeting government agencies and the electric power sector across Russia, Brazil, and Kazakhstan. “Armored Likho blends financially motivated campaigns targeting private individuals with targeted cyber espionage aimed at organizations,” Kaspersky said in a technical analysis published today. “
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The newly spotted PamStealer is spreading through a fake Maccy clipboard app and steal Mac passwords, browser data and clipboard content.¶¶¶¶¶
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A newly disclosed forensic investigation has revealed that Pegasus spyware was used to hack a sitting Member of the European Parliament (MEP) who was actively investigating spyware abuses across the European Union. This raises serious concerns about surveillance targeting democratic institutions. According to a report by Citizen Lab dated July 3, 2026, former Greek MEP […]
The post Pegasus Spyware Hacked European Parliament Member Investigating Spyware Abuse appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.
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How many missions could a drone or satellite fly with a battery pack that can last decades? And what if that battery could be fueled by nuclear waste?
That’s the future scientists are working toward in DARPA’s “Rads to Watts” program, which aims to create lightweight batteries with a high energy density. And a recent $3.37 million contract award aims to fund a viable proof-of-concept device that can produce more than 10 watts per kilogram with a yearslong shelf life.
“Solar cells directly convert sunlight into electricity…Ours directly convert radiation into electricity,” said Stafford Sheehan, CEO and founder of Project Omega, which describes their radioisotope power sources as mini-generators that replace traditional batteries.
“We already have some of these small devices running; the ones that are specifically designed to meet the DARPA figure of merit are going to come out early next year.”
Several organizations are participating in the program, with Morgan State University serving as the prime contractor and handling basic research and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory handling nuclear materials and testing. Northrop Grumman and ARA will bring computational modeling to make sure the prototype meets performance standards.
Project Omega will build the nuclear power generator based on a radioisotope found in nuclear waste, and Widetronix is designing the semiconductor power converter. The goal is to produce a working prototype by early 2027 at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
The power cells could be used in “any application where a battery dying is a pain point,” Sheehan said. “One example is on satellites: if you lose power on a satellite, you lose the satellite, it's gone…if your batteries die and you don't have any sort of backup power.”
These power sources use isotopes separated from nuclear waste and convert radiation directly into electricity.
“At a high level, we take nuclear waste, we recycle it into two products: one is fuel for reactors…the other are power isotopes, so isotopes you can use to power things,” Sheehan said.
Radioisotope power sources have been used in everything from smoke detectors to space systems. But Project Omega hopes to do it on a larger scale.
“There are over 100,000 metric tons of nuclear waste sitting in the 52 reactor sites around the country; so there's plenty of nuclear waste currently. The federal government gets sued for billions of dollars every year just because they haven't dealt with the nuclear waste,” Sheehan said. “It's very valuable to have a battery that lasts.”
Omega’s power cells consist of a solid state, or “chunk,” of isotope that will be layered with the semiconductor to generate power. They also work in extreme temperatures—something that would benefit military operations using unmanned systems in harsh environments.
“We have been using these radioisotope power systems in space for decades,” Sheehan said. “We're just taking the systems that we use for space and we're using a different isotope,” Strontinum-90, which is less hazardous than the Plutonium-238 isotopes used in similar systems.
The award comes as the Pentagon grapples with increased demand and use of drone systems
that have to be charged and the persistent need for more power generation on the battlefield.
“Over the next 18 months, the program will focus on reducing technical risk, testing system performance under realistic conditions, and generating the data needed to inform future development and transition pathways,” a PNNL official wrote in a statement to Defense One. “Key challenges include improving energy conversion efficiency, validating long-term reliability, managing radiation effects, and ensuring safe, secure handling and deployment.”
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Scammers are exploiting consumers’ trust in household and financial brands by deploying polished fake Google Play Store pages and social media ads that push Progressive Web Apps (PWAs) linked to online casinos. The fraud begins with paid social creative on platforms including Facebook, Instagram, Threads and TikTok. Ads present either simple “Brand Slots” labels or […]
The post Fake Google Play Store Pages Use Trusted Brand Names to Push Gambling PWAs appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.
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A new report from the Citizen Lab has revealed that former Member of the European Parliament Stelios Kouloglou had his mobile device repeatedly hacked with the notorious Pegasus spyware while serving on a committee that was tasked with investigating the abuse of such commercial surveillance tools in the bloc. “Through forensic analysis of his device, we found that the attackers could have had
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Alibaba is reportedly preparing to ban the use of Anthropic’s Claude Code across its internal environments starting July 10. This decision comes in light of allegations that the AI-powered coding assistant has a covert detection mechanism resembling a backdoor. The news, first reported by the Chinese financial outlet Yicai and later confirmed by Reuters, has […]
The post Alibaba Reportedly Bans Claude Code Over Alleged Backdoor Risk in AI Coding Tool appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.
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Threat actors are currently exploiting sophisticated ClickFix social engineering campaigns that mimic Google and Cloudflare verification systems to distribute several high-impact malware families, including StealC, HijackLoader, NetSupport RAT, and newly identified loaders. Recent threat intelligence research indicates that these campaigns have been active since late 2025, tricking users into manually executing malicious PowerShell commands. This […]
The post Fake Google and Cloudflare Verification Pages Spread StealC, HijackLoader, and NetSupport Malware appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.
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A newly disclosed vulnerability in Microsoft Exchange, identified as CVE-2026-45504 (CVSS score: 8.8), exposes a critical server-side request forgery (SSRF) flaw. This issue allows authenticated low-privileged users to access and read arbitrary files from vulnerable Exchange servers. The vulnerability, discovered by security researcher Batuhan Er from HawkTrace, affects Microsoft Exchange Server 2019. Microsoft Exchange SSRF […]
The post Microsoft Exchange SSRF Vulnerability Lets Low-Privileged Attackers Read Arbitrary Files appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.
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