Skip to content
The Nexus
DossierENTITY

stolen credentials

Coverage of stolen credentials in the Nexus archive.

Earliest in view: Apr 9 · 14:02 UTCMost recent: Jun 3 · 17:30 UTC
Co-mentioned in this coverage
Recent coverage
  • SECURITYJun 3 · 17:30 UTCTECHCRUNCH
    Ultrahuman says hackers accessed customers’ wellness data via internal tool

    Ultrahuman experienced a data breach where hackers accessed customers' wellness data through an internal tool. The breach occurred due to stolen credentials from a malware-infected employee laptop.

  • SECURITYApr 21 · 11:30 UTCTHE HACKER NEWS
    No Exploit Needed: How Attackers Walk Through the Front Door via Identity-Based Attacks

    The cybersecurity industry has focused on sophisticated threats like zero-days and AI-generated exploits, but stolen credentials remain the most reliable entry point for attackers. Identity-based attacks, particularly through credential stuffing, are a dominant initial access vector in breaches.

  • SECURITYApr 21 · 08:30 UTCTHE REGISTER
    Adaptavist Group breach spawns imposter emails as ransomware crew claims mega-haul

    The Adaptavist Group is investigating a security breach involving stolen credentials, while a ransomware crew claims to have stolen significantly more data than the company has disclosed. Fake emails linked to the breach are circulating as part of the attack.

  • SECURITYApr 17 · 20:16 UTCTECHCRUNCH
    Man who hacked US Supreme Court filing system sentenced to probation

    Nicholas Moore hacked into three U.S. government networks using stolen credentials and later bragged about the breach by posting victims' personal data on Instagram under the handle @ihackedthegovernment. He was sentenced to probation for his actions.

  • SECURITYApr 14 · 14:02 UTCBLEEPING COMPUTER
    5 Ways Zero Trust Maximizes Identity Security

    The article discusses how Zero Trust frameworks enhance identity security by addressing stolen credentials, which are a major breach vector. It highlights Specops' approach to limiting access, enforcing device trust, and preventing lateral movement to mitigate privilege escalation risks.

  • SECURITYApr 9 · 14:02 UTCBLEEPING COMPUTER
    When attackers already have the keys, MFA is just another door to open

    The article discusses how stolen credentials can bypass Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA), turning authentication systems into an attack surface. A wearable biometric authentication token is presented as a solution to verify users rather than sessions, blocking phishing relays and MFA bypass attempts.

stolen credentials · Dossier · The Nexus