News

Ransomware group Akira is believed to be behind a large number of attacks that appear to be tied to SonicWall firewalls with SSLVPN enabled. Over ...
Hackers have been caught using a bring-your-own-vulnerable-driver (BYOVD) attack to exploit SonicWall firewall devices.
Brazil’s Holambra Cooperativa Agroindustrial has outlined the results of deploying advanced cybersecurity solutions from SonicWall.
There are new findings regarding attacks on Sonicwall firewalls. Apparently, attackers are not exploiting a zero-day vulnerability.
GuidePoint Security has discovered attackers exploiting legitimate drivers to gain access to a device. This is accomplished ...
Just sloppy setups and sneaky driversSonicWall walks back zero‑day fears, addresses credential reuse—and now driver-based evasion—in Gen 7 and newer VPN attacks What first looked like a zero-day ...
SonicWall reported that exploitation of a previously disclosed vulnerability has been responsible for recent cyberattacks ...
SonicWall investigating reports about a zero-day being exploited in ransomware attacks, but found no evidence of a new ...
The company said it had linked recent hacks to customers’ use of legacy credentials when migrating from Gen 6 to Gen 7 ...
SonicWall says that recent Akira ransomware attacks exploiting Gen 7 firewalls with SSLVPN enabled are exploiting an older ...
SonicWall confirms recent SSL VPN attacks link to patched CVE-2024-40766 and reused passwords, urging password resets.