Eastern European team developed memory-scraping Kaptoxa (BlackPOS) malware, sold it at least 40 times, says cyber-intelligence firm
A team of at least two developers created the point-of-sale malware used to hack Target, Neiman Marcus, and likely other retailers in the United States, Australia, and Canada.
So said information security intelligence firm IntelCrawler Friday in a report that named a 17-year-old Russian teenager, who used the online handle "ree[4]" (a.k.a. ree4), suspected of being the author of the BlackPOS -- for point-of-sale -- malware. The malware is also known as Kaptoxa, or "potato" in Russian.
But security journalist Brian Krebs, who broke the news of the Target breach in December, questioned IntelCrawler's findings. Subsequently, the intelligence firm updated its research, naming instead a second teenage suspect, who it said shared the ree4 handle with the first suspect. "Intelcrawler apparently just changed its mind about the guy responsible for the Target POS malware," Krebs tweeted Monday. "Now they have the right guy."
Read the full article here.
Have a comment on this story? Please click "Discuss" below. If you'd like to contact Dark Reading's editors directly, send us a message.
About the Author(s)
You May Also Like
Securing Code in the Age of AI
April 24, 2024Beyond Spam Filters and Firewalls: Preventing Business Email Compromises in the Modern Enterprise
April 30, 2024Key Findings from the State of AppSec Report 2024
May 7, 2024Is AI Identifying Threats to Your Network?
May 14, 2024Where and Why Threat Intelligence Makes Sense for Your Enterprise Security Strategy
May 15, 2024
Black Hat USA - August 3-8 - Learn More
August 3, 2024Cybersecurity's Hottest New Technologies: What You Need To Know
March 21, 2024