Thousands of iPhones were compromised using the Coruna exploit kit, which chained 23 iOS vulnerabilities into advanced attacks used for espionage and cybercrime.
The Google Threat Intelligence Group says it found an iPhone exploit kit that could crack the device and sniff out crypto wallets, apps and seed phrases to steal funds.
A previously undocumented set of 23 iOS exploits named "Coruna" has been deployed by multiple threat actors in targeted espionage campaigns and financially motivated attacks.
Google and iVerify researchers say the case points to a thriving secondary market for high-end zero-day exploits.
Researchers used sophisticated resonant X-ray scattering to directly view spin wave currents. The findings were published in Nature.
New malware spreads via fake GitHub downloads, stealing browser passwords, crypto wallets, Discord tokens, and credit card details from Windows users.