Okay, deep breath, let's get this over with. In the grand act of digital self-sabotage, we've littered this site with cookies. Yep, we did that. Why? So your highness can have a 'premium' experience or whatever. These traitorous cookies hide in your browser, eagerly waiting to welcome you back like a guilty dog that's just chewed your favorite shoe. And, if that's not enough, they also tattle on which parts of our sad little corner of the web you obsess over. Feels dirty, doesn't it?
Kremlin’s Keyboard Warriors: Unmasking the COLDRIVER Cyberspy Campaign Against NATO Targets
Dodge the digital blizzard! Kremlin-linked COLDRIVER cyberspies now deliver custom SPICA backdoors, fooling targets with faux PDFs since November 2022. Watch out for their frosty phishing! 🌨️🕵️♂️ #CyberEspionageComedy

Hot Take:
Attention comrades in digital espionage! The crafty hackers of Mother Russia have taken a break from their phishing rod to toy with some shiny new malware. That's right, the FSB's digital spy kids, known as COLDRIVER, have graduated from their old-school phishing scams to playing with a custom backdoor named SPICA. It's like they've swapped their wooden matryoshka dolls for sleek, Rust-coded, Swiss Army knives of cyber snooping. Google's Threat Analysis Group (aka the digital Sherlock Holmes) has been hot on their cybernetic heels, but these Russian cyber spies seem determined to keep their game of digital hide and seek going strong.