Fashion sector targeted again as Louis Vuitton confirms data breach

Louis Vuitton Hong Kong is under investigation after a data breach potentially exposed the personal information of around 419,000 customers, according to the South China Morning Post.

The company informed Hong Kong’s privacy watchdog on 17 July, more than a month after its French office first detected suspicious activity on 13 June. The Office of the Privacy Commissioner has now launched a formal inquiry.

Early findings suggest that compromised data includes names, passport numbers, birth dates, phone numbers, email addresses, physical addresses, purchase histories, and product preferences.

Although no complaints have been filed so far, the regulator is examining whether the reporting delay breached data protection rules and how the unauthorised access occurred. Louis Vuitton stated that it responded quickly with the assistance of external cybersecurity experts and confirmed that no payment details were involved.

The incident adds to a growing list of cyberattacks targeting fashion and retail brands in 2025. In May, fast fashion giant Shein confirmed a breach that affected customer support systems.

[Correction] Contrary to some reports, Puma was not affected by a ransomware attack in 2025. This claim appears to be inaccurate and is not corroborated by any verified public disclosures or statements by the company. Please disregard any previous mentions suggesting otherwise.

Security experts have warned that the sector remains a growing target due to high-value customer data and limited cyber defences. Louis Vuitton said it continues to upgrade its security systems and will notify affected individuals and regulators as the investigation continues.

‘We sincerely regret any concern or inconvenience this situation may cause,’ the company said in a statement.

[Dear readers, a previous version of this article highlighted incorrect information about a cyberattack on Puma. The information has been removed from our website, and we hereby apologise to Puma and our readers.]

Nearly 2 million patients affected in healthcare cyberattack

Anne Arundel Dermatology, a network of over 100 clinics across seven states, has confirmed a cyberattack that compromised patient data for nearly 1.9 million individuals.

The breach between 14 February and 13 May 2025 may have exposed sensitive personal and medical records.

The company responded swiftly by isolating affected systems, working with forensic experts and completing a full file review by 27 June.

While there is no evidence that the data was accessed or misused, patients were notified and offered 24 months of identity-theft protection.

The incident ranks among the largest reported healthcare data breaches this year, prompting mandatory notifications to state attorneys general and the HHS Office for Civil Rights.

Affected individuals are advised to monitor statements and credit reports carefully.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Drug‑testing firm exposes 748,000 records in breach

In a massive data breach revealed in July 2025, the Texas Alcohol & Drug Testing Service (TADTS) admitted hackers gained access to sensitive information belonging to approximately 748,763 individuals.

Attackers remained inside the network for five days in July 2024 before detection, later leaking hundreds of gigabytes of data via the BianLian ransomware group.

Exposed records include a dangerous mix of personal and financial data—names, Social Security and passport numbers, driver’s licence and bank account details, biometric information, health‑insurance files and login credentials.

The breadth of this data presents a significant risk of identity theft and financial fraud.

Despite identifying the breach shortly after, TADTS delayed notifying those affected until July 2025 and provided no credit monitoring or identity theft services.

The company is now under classic action scrutiny, with law firms investigating its response and breach notification delays.

Security experts warn that the extended timeline and broad data exposure could lead to scams, account takeovers and sustained damage to victims.

Affected individuals are urged to monitor statements, access free credit reports, and remain alert for suspicious activity.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Salt Typhoon targets routers in sweeping campaign

Since early 2025, the Chinese-linked hacking group Salt Typhoon has aggressively targeted telecom infrastructure worldwide, compromising routers, switches and edge devices used by clients of major operators such as Comcast, MTN and LG Uplus.

Exploiting known but unpatched vulnerabilities, attackers gained persistent access to these network devices, potentially enabling further intrusions into core telecom systems.

The pattern suggests a strategic shift: the group broadly sweeps telecom infrastructure to establish ready-made access across critical communication channels.

Affected providers emphasised that only client-owned hardware was breached and confirmed no internal networks were compromised, but the campaign raises deeper concerns.

Experts warn that such indiscriminate telecommunications targeting could threaten data security and disrupt essential services, revealing a long-term cyber‑espionage strategy.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Nvidia’s container toolkit patched after critical bug

Cloud security researchers at Wiz have uncovered a critical misconfiguration in Nvidia’s Container Toolkit, used widely across managed AI services, that could allow a malicious container to break out and gain full root privileges on the host system.

The vulnerability, tracked as CVE‑2025‑23266 and nicknamed ‘NVIDIAScape’, arises from unsafe handling of OCI hooks. Exploiters can bypass container boundaries by using a simple three‑line Dockerfile, granting them access to server files, memory and GPU resources.

With Nvidia’s toolkit integral to GPU‑accelerated cloud offerings, the risk is systemic. A single compromised container could steal or corrupt sensitive data and AI models belonging to other tenants on the same infrastructure.

Nvidia has released a security advisory alongside updated toolkit versions. Users are strongly advised to apply patches immediately. Experts also recommend deploying additional isolation measures, such as virtual machines, to protect against container escape threats in multi-tenant AI environments.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Crypto crime surges to record levels in 2025

The cryptocurrency industry faces a record-breaking year for theft in 2025, with losses surpassing $2.17 billion by mid-July, according to a Chainalysis report. The amount stolen so far has surpassed the total for all of 2024, highlighting a concerning increase in digital asset crime.

A large proportion, around $1.5 billion, stems from the North Korea-linked Bybit hack, which accounts for nearly 70% of thefts targeting crypto services this year.

While centralised exchanges remain prime targets, personal wallets now represent almost a quarter of stolen funds. The report highlights a rise in violent ‘wrench attacks,’ where criminals coerce Bitcoin holders into revealing private keys through threats or physical force.

Kidnappings of crypto executives and family members have also increased, with 2025 expected to double the number of such physical assaults compared to previous years.

Sophistication in laundering stolen crypto varies depending on the target. Hackers focusing on exchanges use advanced techniques like chain-hopping and mixers to obscure transactions.

Conversely, attackers targeting personal wallets often employ simpler methods. Interestingly, criminals are holding stolen assets longer and are willing to pay fees up to 14.5 times higher than average to swiftly move illicit funds and avoid detection.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot

Hackers hide malware using DNS TXT records

Hackers are increasingly exploiting DNS records to deliver malware undetected, according to new research from DomainTools.

Instead of relying on typical delivery methods such as emails or downloads, attackers now hide malicious code within DNS TXT records, part of the Domain Name System, often overlooked by security systems.

The method involves converting malware into hexadecimal code, splitting it into small segments, and storing each chunk in the TXT record of subdomains under domains like whitetreecollective.com.

Once attackers gain limited access to a network, they retrieve these chunks via ordinary-looking DNS queries, reassembling them into functioning malware without triggering antivirus or firewall alerts.

The rising use of encrypted DNS protocols like DNS-over-HTTPS and DNS-over-TLS makes detecting such queries harder, especially without in-house DNS resolvers equipped for deep inspection.

Researchers also noted that attackers are using DNS TXT records for malware and embedding harmful text designed to manipulate AI systems through prompt injection.

Ian Campbell of DomainTools warns that even organisations with strong security measures struggle to detect such DNS-based threats due to the hidden nature of the traffic.

Instead of focusing solely on traditional defences, organisations are advised to monitor DNS traffic closely, log and inspect queries through internal resolvers, and restrict DNS access to trusted sources. Educating teams on these emerging threats remains essential for maintaining robust cybersecurity.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

China now the top DDoS target, says Cloudflare

Cloudflare’s latest DDoS threat report reveals that business competitors initiate most known attacks. Of the customers who identified attackers, 63% blamed rivals, 21% pointed to state-linked actors, and 5% admitted self-inflicted disruptions caused by misconfigurations.

The Q2 report shows China as the most targeted country, followed by Brazil and Germany, while Ukraine, Singapore and Indonesia are listed among the top sources of DDoS traffic. Telecommunications, internet services and gaming are the industries most frequently targeted by attackers.

Cloudflare highlighted that the locations identified as sources often reflect the presence of botnets, proxies or VPNs, not the actual location of threat actors. Countries like the Netherlands appear high on the list due to favourable privacy laws and strong network infrastructure.

The company urged broader participation in its threat intelligence feed to help mitigate risks. Over 600 providers currently use Cloudflare’s data to remove abusive accounts and stop the spread of DDoS attacks across the internet.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

EU helps Vietnam prepare for cyber emergencies

The European Union and Vietnam have conducted specialised cyber‑defence training to enhance the resilience of key infrastructure sectors such as power, transportation, telecoms and finance.

Participants, including government officials, network operators and technology experts, engaged in interactive threat-hunting exercises and incident simulation drills designed to equip teams with practical cyber‑response skills.

This effort builds on existing international partnerships, including collaboration with the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, to align Vietnam’s security posture with global standards.

Vietnam faces an alarming shortfall of more than 700,000 cyber professionals, with over half of organisations reporting at least one breach in recent years.

The training initiative addresses critical skills gaps and contributes to national digital security resilience.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Trojanised Telegram APKs target Android users with Janus exploit

A large Android malware campaign has been uncovered, distributing trojanised versions of Telegram Messenger via more than 600 malicious domains. The operation uses phishing infrastructure and evasion techniques to deceive users and deliver infected APK files.

Domains exploit typosquatting, with names like ‘teleqram’ and ‘apktelegram’, and mimic Telegram’s website using cloned visuals and QR code redirects. Users are sent to zifeiji[.]asia, which hosts a fake Telegram site offering APK downloads between 60MB and 70MB.

The malware targets Android versions 5.0 to 8.0, exploiting the Janus vulnerability and bypassing security via legacy signature schemes. After installation, it establishes persistent access using socket callbacks, enabling remote control.

It communicates via unencrypted HTTP and FTP, and uses Android’s MediaPlayer component to trigger background activity unnoticed. Once installed, it requests extensive permissions, including access to all locally stored data.

Domains involved include over 300 on .com, with many registered through Gname, suggesting a coordinated and resilient campaign structure.

Researchers also found a JavaScript tracker embedded at telegramt.net, which collects browser and device data and sends it to dszb77[.]com. The goal appears to be user profiling and behavioural analysis.

Experts warn that the campaign’s scale and technical sophistication pose a significant risk to users running outdated Android systems.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!