The Kimwolf botnet has ensnared over 2 million Android devices, mainly exploiting an exposed ADB service through residential ...
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 ...
The security company Synthient currently sees more than 2 million infected Kimwolf devices distributed globally but with ...
Kimwolf is the latest reminder that the most dangerous botnets now grow quietly inside everyday consumer electronics.
Kimwolf botnet has infected over 1.8 million Android TVs, boxes and gadgets worldwide, turning home devices into DDoS and proxy tools.
On October 30th, Cloudfare data identified a strange website that briefly surpassed Google as the most popular website ...
Trump signs the National Defense Authorization Act for 2026. Danish intelligence officials accuse Russia of orchestrating cyberattacks against critical infrastructure. LongNosedGoblin targets ...
Kimwolf, an Android botnet with 1.8 million infected devices, is rapidly evolving using ENS for resilience Its code and infrastructure overlap with AISURU, indicating both belong to the same threat ...
A massive new botnet, Kimwolf, briefly surpassed Google on the top websites chart. With 1.8 million Android devices and counting, a botnet of such scale is capable of launching unseen cyberattacks, ...