‼️🇮🇱 Smartphones worldwide were silently infected with Israeli malware via malicious ads
Simply viewing their ads was enough to get infected.
Surveillance company Intellexa gained full access to cameras, microphones, chat apps, emails, GPS locations, photos, files, and browsing activity.
Internal leaked company documents, sales and marketing materials, as well as training videos from the “Intellexa Leaks” investigation provide a never-before-seen glimpse into the internal operations of a mercenary spyware company focused on exploiting vulnerabilities in mobile devices to enable targeted surveillance attacks on human rights defenders, journalists, and members of civil society.
In an attempt to hide the spyware operator's identity, all data is relayed through a chain of anonymization servers called the “CNC Anonymization Network.”
Since the spyware relies on browser exploits, the operator must trick the victim into opening the malicious link; if the link is not opened, infection fails.
Each time a one-click attack link is sent, it risks exposing the operator, as a suspicious target may share it with forensic experts, revealing the attack and potentially the operator.
To avoid detection, Intellexa has designed several “delivery vectors”—different approaches to triggering the opening of an infection link on the target’s phone without requiring the target to manually click it. This enables Intellexa to offer zero-click-like functionality without needing additional zero-click exploits.
One slide shows they’ve been buying or partnering with ISPs to deliver their malicious payloads.
Ongoing research and technical investigations by Amnesty International indicate that advertisement-based infection methods are being actively developed and used by multiple mercenary spyware companies and by certain governments that have built similar ADINT infection systems.
Amnesty International believes that the use of such “silent” vectors to deliver browser exploits will continue to grow as targets become increasingly suspicious of unknown links and as true zero-click attacks become more expensive and technically difficult to achieve. These findings should redouble efforts by technology vendors and companies in the digital advertising ecosystem to investigate and disrupt such attacks.
Despite Intellexa being sanctioned by the US, they're still operating.
‼️ Meet the personal hacker who worked for Epstein
His name was redacted, but based on what was previously known:
👉 Sold his company to CrowdStrike in 2017
👉 Took a VP role at the company after the acquisition
👉 Born in Calabria
We can now confirm he is Vincenzo Iozzo.
His LinkedIn shows his company "Iperlane" was sold to CrowdStrike and that he was also a board member of Black Hat, hence he invited Jeffrey to join him at Black Hat.
He is currently CEO of SlashID and likes to post about Shinyhunters on LinkedIn.
He is also one of the authors of iOS Hacker's Handbook.
‼️A security researcher from Australia built a mass surveillance tool by scraping Waze reports and tracking the users behind them
He successfully linked usernames to real-world identities, allowing him to pinpoint where individuals live and work.
Waze has since responded by removing the feature that exposed usernames.
He was able to deanonymize custom usernames by using OSINT tools.
After he has a username he can plot it on a map an see where that user has been it's entire lifetime. Leading to the disclosure of:
- The general area where they likely live (cluster of morning reports.
- The area where they likely work (cluster of daytime reports)
- Their regular commute routes
- Their approximate schedule
‼️A German hacker known as "Martha Root" dressed as a pink Power Ranger and deleted a white supremacist dating website live onstage
This happened during the recent CCC conference.
Martha had infiltrated the site, ran her own AI chatbot to extract as much information from users as possible, and downloaded every profile. She also uncovered the owner of the site. She has published all of the data.
I found this video of “Marta Root” on her YouTube channel explaining what she did.
A chart showing where users of the white supremacist dating site come from.
‼️🇰🇵 Meet North Korean recruiter 'Aaron,' who infiltrates Western companies by using AI and posing as a remote IT worker using stolen or rented identities.
He was lured into a sandbox by researchers, who observed the wild APT in a controlled setting to see what he would do.
He wanders around the web sending messages to people like "I’d like to offer your an opportunity that I think could be interesting.".. Turns out @MauroEldritch likes opportunities.
Aaron then asks the "legit" worker to download AnyDesk.
‼️ This is a story about a dev who got a job interview at xAI, where they stripped him of his knowledge about how he used the user X API to create two impressive projects, hence the job interview.
After they got what they wanted, X sent a cease and desist, and told him he wasn’t hired.
Despite the developer being open about his project with X employees from the beginning, and getting a job interview and vouch because of it, Nikita Bier mocked him after he was sent a cease and desist.
Nikita deleted the post, but we still have a copy:
The developer @seloesque, behind the popular sites xglobalrank.com and x-graphs.com, didn’t understand why X did this. He was always transparent and communicative with X employees: he created these projects to land a job at xAI.