The North Korean hacking group ScarCruft launched a large-scale attack in May that leveraged an Internet Explorer zero-day flaw to infect targets with the RokRAT malware and exfiltrate data. A new ...
If you receive an e-mail offering a download of Internet Explorer 7 Beta 2, delete it. A new virus is making the rounds that comes disguised as a test version of Microsoft’s current Web browser.
North Korean state-sponsored hackers exploited a previously unknown zero-day vulnerability in Internet Explorer to target South Korean users with malware, according to Google’s Threat Analysis Group.
Internet Explorer was disabled last year, but that isn’t stopping North Korean hackers from abusing the supposedly dead browser to attack users. According to new security research, a suspected North ...
Microsoft Internet Explorer suffers a reputation for being insecure, but a recent test by NSS Labs reveals that the browser, especially the recently released Version 9, is the best candidate for ...
The company retained IE Mode because some older websites in certain parts of the world remain accessible only through Internet Explorer. But the decision is a double-edged sword; last year, security ...
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North Korean hackers target South Korea with Internet Explorer vulnerabilities to deploy RokRAT malware
South Korean citizens were hit with a zero-click malware from the North The malware used pop-up ads to install payloads Keyloggers and other malicious surveillance software was also installed North ...
In an independent test of browser-based malware blocking, Internet Explorer 9 scored top marks, as its effective URL filter combined with its aggressive executable blocking worked together to keep ...
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