Threat actors entered Treasury Department systems through BeyondTrust. The breach may be related to the Salt Typhoon attacks reported throughout the year. A Chinese-state-sponsored cyberattack ...
The company was initially based in Phoenix before being acquired in 2018 by Atlanta-based Bomgar, which adopted the BeyondTrust name. Part of the company's stated mission is to "secure identities ...
On December 8, the Treasury was notified by BeyondTrust that a key used for remote technical support had been pilfered, meaning that a threat actor could access some Departmental Office workstations ...
The hack, described as a "major incident" by Treasury officials, involved the compromise of a third-party cybersecurity service provider, BeyondTrust, and resulted in the theft of unclassified ...
A Chinese state-sponsored cyberattack on the U.S. Treasury Department, compromising workstations and unclassified documents. Newsweek's live blog is closed.
The application offers remote technical support to its employees. The compromised third-party service - called BeyondTrust - has since been taken offline, officials said. There was no evidence to ...
The cybersecurity firm, BeyondTrust, was the first to become aware of the breach, alerting the Treasury Department on December 8th. According to the Treasury, the hackers broke into employee ...
"On December 8, 2024, Treasury was notified by a third-party software service provider, BeyondTrust, that a threat actor had gained access to a key used by the vendor to secure a cloud-based service ...
The attackers exploited vulnerabilities in remote tech support software provided by the identity and access management firm BeyondTrust, and Treasury said in its letter to lawmakers that “the ...
The hackers stole a key from a third-party software service provider, BeyondTrust, and used it to override security and gain access to Treasury Department workstations, according to the letter ...