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A new Internet-of-Things botnet called Kimwolf has spread to more than 2 million devices, forcing infected systems to participate in massive distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks and to relay other malicious and abusive Internet traffic. Kimwolf’s ability to scan the local networks of compromised systems for other IoT devices to infect makes it a sobering threat to organizations, and new research reveals Kimwolf is surprisingly prevalent in government and corporate networks.
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Synthient discovers over 2 million Android TV boxes and smart TVs hijacked by the Kimwolf botnet. Learn how hackers are using home devices to launch DDoS attacks and how you can protect your home network.
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The story you are reading is a series of scoops nestled inside a far more urgent Internet-wide security advisory. The vulnerability at issue has been exploited for months already, and it’s time for a broader awareness of the threat. The short version is that everything you thought you knew about the security of the internal network behind your Internet router probably is now dangerously out of date.
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911s5, 922 Proxy, A Little Sunshine, Aisuru, AISURU Botnet, Akamai Technologies, Android Debug Bridge, BadBox 2.0, Ben Brundage, Chad Seaman, DDoS-for-Hire, HUMAN Security, IPidea, Kimwolf, Kimwolf botnet, krebsfiveheadindustries, Latest Warnings, Lindsay Kaye, Oxylabs, Quokka, residential proxy, Riley Kilmer, Spur, Synthient, Uhale app, Web Fraud 2.0, XLab¶¶¶¶¶
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