A week in security (September 23 – September 29)

Last week on Malwarebytes Labs:

Millions of Kia vehicles were vulnerable to remote attacks with just a license plate number

Privacy watchdog files complaint over Firefox quietly enabling its Privacy Preserving Attribution

Telegram will hand over user details to law enforcement

Don’t share the viral Instagram Meta AI “legal” post

Romance scams costlier than ever: 10 percent of victims lose $10,000 or more

Malwarebytes Personal Data Remover: A new way to help scrub personal data online

100 million+ US citizens have records leaked by background check service

San Francisco’s fight against deepfake porn, with City Attorney David Chiu (Lock and Code S05E20)

Relationship broken up? Here’s how to separate your online accounts

SpaceX, CNN, and The White House internal data allegedly published online. Is it real?

Last week on ThreatDown:

Introducing Detection Center: Centralized threat management simplified

Hybrid cloud environments are not safe from ransomware

Android’s Rusty new code shakes off huge number of memory-safe vulnerabilities

New integration: Nebula and OneView with Google Chronicle SIEM

North Korean IT workers—or how not to solve the IT staff shortage

Stay safe!

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