Tag Archive for: $25M

Aware teams with MFA provider to fight ransomware, makes $2.5M strategic investment


Aware teams with MFA provider to fight ransomware, makes $2.5M strategic investment

Aware has formed a partnership with Miracl, which provides multi-factor authentication through a single step, and made a $2.5 million investment in its new partner’s parent company Omlis Limited, as it seeks to apply its biometrics to minimizing risk from data breaches and ransomware.

The partnership is expected to enable Aware to extend its cloud-based biometric authentication to customers in financial services and other industries to protect against data breaches and ransomware, through a mutual reseller agreement, according to the announcement. Miracle contributes risk management functionality to Aware’s solutions portfolio, and makes its “adaptive authentication” services more varied to fit specific customer needs.

“Data breaches and ransomware are continuing to wreak havoc on enterprises, and recent high-profile attacks like the Colonial Pipeline are reminders of the escalating threats we continue to face,” says Bob Eckel, chief executive officer and president of Aware. “In many cases, government agencies are calling on organizations to pursue multifactor authentication (MFA) to enhance their security. To date, many defenses against cybercrimes have relied on zero knowledge trust, which has several disadvantages; or traditional passwords, which are prone to login errors and irritating reset requirements. With MFA that incorporates biometrics, organizations can now have unprecedented protection and user privacy without the risks or frustrations of other approaches. This technology we now have available is an important and effective tool against these sorts of attacks.”

The partners can sell each other’s technologies and integrate them into their own product lines under the agreement, which will allow them to bring passwordless login products to market quickly.

Miracl gains access to Aware’s affordable, high-performance biometrics to provide a more extensive range of authentication capabilities along with its flagship authentication and transaction-signing solution, Miracl Trust.

“Ransomware attacks have increased more than 150 percent between the first six months of 2021 compared to the same period the previous year. MFA is…

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Ransomware attack costs Illinois attorney general's office more than $2.5M – Chicago Tribune



Ransomware attack costs Illinois attorney general’s office more than $2.5M  Chicago Tribune

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Vodafone’s ho. Mobile admits data breach, 2.5m users impacted


Vodafone Group’s low-cost operator ho. Mobile announced that hackers stole part of its customer database thus obtaining personal user information and SIM technical data.

The stolen database, offered for sale on dark web forums since December 22, has been partially verified and includes sufficient details to carry out SIM-swap attacks, putting at risk about 2.5 million subscribers.

Free SIM card replacement

News of the database being peddled on a hacker forum emerged on December 28 from researcher Bank Security. An initial statement from the mobile operator informed that it had no evidence of illegal access to its systems.

This changed on Monday when the company confirmed the massive breach saying that personal data and SIM-related information had been stolen.

The operator says that the hackers got customers’ name, surname, phone number, email, date and place of birth, nationality, and address. They also have the SIM Integrated Circuit Card Identification Number (ICCID) – a unique number providing the card’s country, home network, and identification.

Combined, these details can be used for SIM-swapping attacks that enable hackers to assign a victim’s phone number to a SIM card in their possession and thus receive the target’s calls and text messages.

Bank Security provides a list of the details present in the database stolen by hackers:

At least one actor may have purchased the database, while several others showed interest.

In a comment on the hacker forum, one user says that the seller asked for $50,000 for the entire database. Even if not sold in bulk, the seller could break it into smaller sets to obtain a profit.

Using the sample data from the seller, several researchers were able to confirm that the database was real by contacting victims.

The mobile operator is now trying to minimize the impact of the breach on customers and is offering them a new SIM card free of charge.

With the risk of a swap still looming, the SIM replacement process requires…

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Zimperium Raises $25M for Mobile Security Tech – eWeek


eWeek

Zimperium Raises $ 25M for Mobile Security Tech
eWeek
Mobile security vendor Zimperium announced on June 7 that it raised $ 25 million in a Series C round of funding, bringing total funding to date for the company up to $ 43.5 million. The company will use the new funding to expand its global operations and …

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