The desktop app from 3CX has been affected in the attack, which is being used by the threat actor to target 3CX customers, according to researchers from several cybersecurity vendors. A desktop ...
A digitally signed and trojanized version of the 3CX Voice Over Internet Protocol (VOIP) desktop client is reportedly being used to target the company’s customers in an ongoing supply chain attack.
If you use the 3CX desktop app for Windows or Mac, watch out: Hackers have hijacked the software to deliver malware to computers. On Wednesday, cybersecurity providers noticed malicious activity ...
The supply chain compromise of a widely used VoIP phone system vendor, 3CX, has led to attacks against numerous customers and prompted comparisons to some of the largest breaches in recent memory — ...
The attack that injected malicious code into the company's software appears to have been enabled by another compromised application. At the end of March, an international VoIP software company called ...
The cybersecurity industry has scrambled in recent weeks to understand the origins and fallout of the breach of 3CX, a VoIP provider whose software was corrupted by North Korea–linked hackers in a ...
Turns out 3CX was not the original target in a recent supply chain compromise affecting customers of the video conferencing software maker: The attack came via a prior supply chain compromise ...
Multiple security firms have sounded the alarm about an active supply chain attack that’s using a trojanized version of 3CX’s widely used voice and video-calling client to target downstream customers.