When a top mob boss turns his co-criminals over to the authorities, the US Federal Bureau of Information labels him a ‘stool pigeon.’ Similarly, the AlphaV ransomware gang is turning informer, not on its rivals but on its victims. In what is a likely portent of things to come, the gang has had the nerve to inform on MeridianLink (MLNK) to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for being slow to report a ransomware attack that they themselves had initiated earlier in the month.
Ransomware gang, ALPHV/BlackCat has reported MeridianLink to the SEC, for not disclosing cyber attack. ALPHV/BlackCat informed the SEC that MeridianLink did not disclose details of the attack, which could potentially affect the data of the publicly traded company's thousands of financial organizations, banks, credit unions, and mortgage lenders. The lack of cyber compliance from MeridianLink breaks the SEC’s rule of disclosing cyber attacks within 4 days of the attack occurring to the agency.
SlashNext's "State of Phishing Report for 2023" report stated the 1265% phishing increase in malicious phishing emails since Q4 2022, correlating to ChatGPT's launch. It was also reported that 31,000 phishing emails were sent on a daily basis in the past year, 68% of them being text-based Business Email Compromise (BEC).
Some aspects of the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)’s stringent new
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