In October 2025, the University of Pennsylvania was the victim of a data breach followed by a ransom demand, largely affecting its donor database. After the incident, the attackers sent inflammatory emails to some victims. The data was later published online in February 2026 and included 624k unique email addresses alongside names and physical addresses. For some donor records, additional personal information was exposed, including gender and date of birth. A small subset of records also contained religion, spouse name, estimated income and donation history. – Read more
Latest article
3 practical ways AI threat detection improves enterprise cyber resilience
Why “more alerts” isn’t the same as better security If you run security in an enterprise environment, you already know...
North Korean Hackers Use Fake IT Worker Scheme to Infiltrate Companies and Evade Sanctions
North Korea has been running one of the most quietly effective cyber fraud operations in recent years. State-sponsored operatives working for the Pyongyang...
[R1] Nessus Versions 10.11.4 and 10.12.0 Fixes Arbitrary File Deletion
Nessus Versions 10.11.4 and 10.12.0 Fixes Arbitrary File Deletion Jason Schavel Thu, 04/23/2026 - 14:30
A vulnerability has been identified in Nessus on...
It pays to be a forever student
Welcome to this week’s edition of the Threat Source newsletter. If I haven’t said it in a newsletter before, I'll say it now: If you want to be good...







