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Cyble Sweeps 22 Badges in G2 Summer 2025 Report, Validating Customer-Centric Security Approach
Cyble Sweeps 22 Badges in G2 Summer 2025 Report, Validating Customer-Centric Security Approach

Yahoo

time9 hours ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Cyble Sweeps 22 Badges in G2 Summer 2025 Report, Validating Customer-Centric Security Approach

CUPERTINO, Calif., July 02, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Cyble, a global leader in AI-powered cybersecurity solutions, has earned 22 badges in the G2 Summer 2025 Report, emphasizing its growing influence across the cybersecurity landscape. The recognition spans eight key categories, including Attack Surface Management, Brand Intelligence, Dark Web Monitoring, Threat Intelligence, and System Security. G2, the world's largest software marketplace, evaluates platforms based on verified customer reviews and overall market presence. These G2 Summer Badges reflect Cyble's continued momentum as a trusted name in proactive, intelligence-driven security and its commitment to supporting organizations in a rapidly evolving threat environment. "This recognition is deeply meaningful because it's based on real user feedback," said Beenu Arora, Co-founder and CEO of Cyble. "It validates the impact our solutions have in the real world, helping clients detect, manage, and respond to threats before they escalate." Cyble stood out across multiple G2 industry grids as a Grid Leader, High Performer, and Easiest to Use platform in categories such as Threat Intelligence, Brand Intelligence, Dark Web Monitoring, System Security, and Web Security. These recognitions highlight the platform's unique strength in combining cutting-edge AI with intuitive design, making threat intelligence accessible, actionable, and effective for security teams of all sizes. As cyberattacks grow, organizations need fast, reliable, and scalable ways to manage their digital risk. Cyble's AI-powered platform equips businesses with the real-time visibility and intelligence needed to monitor threats across the surface, deep, and dark web, before they become breaches. With this recognition, Cyble has once again proven that customer trust and pioneering technology can go hand in hand. From small businesses to global enterprises, Cyble supports clients across industries in building stronger, more resilient cybersecurity postures. These latest G2 accolades affirm Cyble's position as a leader in threat intelligence and attack surface management, grounded in transparency, usability, and customer success. About Cyble Cyble is a leading global cybersecurity company that empowers organizations with real-time threat intelligence, digital risk monitoring, and AI-driven cyber defense. Through platforms like Cyble Vision, Hawk, TIP, and Titan, the company helps customers reduce risk, stay ahead of emerging threats, and build cyber resilience across the digital landscape. Cyble is recognized by Forrester, Gartner, and G2 as a trusted innovator in cyber threat intelligence and attack surface management. For more information, visit View source version on Contacts Media: Email: enquiries@ Phone: +1 888 673 2067 Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Cyble Sweeps 22 Badges in G2 Summer 2025 Report, Validating Customer-Centric Security Approach
Cyble Sweeps 22 Badges in G2 Summer 2025 Report, Validating Customer-Centric Security Approach

Business Wire

time9 hours ago

  • Business
  • Business Wire

Cyble Sweeps 22 Badges in G2 Summer 2025 Report, Validating Customer-Centric Security Approach

CUPERTINO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Cyble, a global leader in AI-powered cybersecurity solutions, has earned 22 badges in the G2 Summer 2025 Report, emphasizing its growing influence across the cybersecurity landscape. The recognition spans eight key categories, including Attack Surface Management, Brand Intelligence, Dark Web Monitoring, Threat Intelligence, and System Security. G2, the world's largest software marketplace, evaluates platforms based on verified customer reviews and overall market presence. These G2 Summer Badges reflect Cyble's continued momentum as a trusted name in proactive, intelligence-driven security and its commitment to supporting organizations in a rapidly evolving threat environment. 'This recognition is deeply meaningful because it's based on real user feedback,' said Beenu Arora, Co-founder and CEO of Cyble. 'It validates the impact our solutions have in the real world, helping clients detect, manage, and respond to threats before they escalate.' Cyble stood out across multiple G2 industry grids as a Grid Leader, High Performer, and Easiest to Use platform in categories such as Threat Intelligence, Brand Intelligence, Dark Web Monitoring, System Security, and Web Security. These recognitions highlight the platform's unique strength in combining cutting-edge AI with intuitive design, making threat intelligence accessible, actionable, and effective for security teams of all sizes. As cyberattacks grow, organizations need fast, reliable, and scalable ways to manage their digital risk. Cyble's AI-powered platform equips businesses with the real-time visibility and intelligence needed to monitor threats across the surface, deep, and dark web, before they become breaches. With this recognition, Cyble has once again proven that customer trust and pioneering technology can go hand in hand. From small businesses to global enterprises, Cyble supports clients across industries in building stronger, more resilient cybersecurity postures. These latest G2 accolades affirm Cyble's position as a leader in threat intelligence and attack surface management, grounded in transparency, usability, and customer success. About Cyble Cyble is a leading global cybersecurity company that empowers organizations with real-time threat intelligence, digital risk monitoring, and AI-driven cyber defense. Through platforms like Cyble Vision, Hawk, TIP, and Titan, the company helps customers reduce risk, stay ahead of emerging threats, and build cyber resilience across the digital landscape. Cyble is recognized by Forrester, Gartner, and G2 as a trusted innovator in cyber threat intelligence and attack surface management.

9 apps you should delete from your phone immediately
9 apps you should delete from your phone immediately

Metro

time12-06-2025

  • Metro

9 apps you should delete from your phone immediately

Hiyah Zaidi Published June 11, 2025 11:54am Link is copied Comments Experts have recommended people get rid of certain apps from their phone after a team of researchers uncovered a series of them which imitate the names or icons of legitimate ones. Many of us keep hundreds of apps on our phones and often forget about them shortly after they download – but that can make us vulnerable (Picture: Getty) Experts tend to urge people to download apps from official apps stores, such as the Apple's App Store or Google's Play Store. However, even that is not always guaranteed to keep you safe. A list, issued by cyber security software company Cyble, revealed that these fake digital crypto wallets apps open a phishing website or an in-app WebView once they have been installed and opened (Picture: Getty) The apps then request a mnemonic phrase which can be used to empty your crypto-wallet. The company found more than 20 apps target crypto users by impersonating 'popular wallets such as SushiSwap, PancakeSwap, Hyperliquid, and Raydium' which trick users into installs by using 'compromised or repurposed developer accounts'. Right now, they warn there are nine wallets that are being mimicked, but that list could grow as there are more than 20 apps currently identified (Picture: Getty) The apps you should delete immediately are:• Pancake Swap• Suiet Wallet• Hyperliquid• Raydium• BullX Crypto• OpenOcean Exchange• Meteora Exchange• SushiSwap• Harvest Finance Blog (Picture: Getty) Digital wallets have no safety net, so any losses can't be recovered. Therefore, it is important that you do not download any apps unless you are sure they are provided by the people behind the wallet, and you have linked to the app from the actual website. If you have any of these apps, its important to delete them (Picture: Getty) In the report, the team concluded: 'This campaign highlights a well-coordinated phishing operation targeting the rapidly growing user base of cryptocurrency wallets. By distributing over 20 counterfeit Android applications through the Google Play Store, the threat actors impersonate legitimate wallets such as PancakeSwap, SushiSwap, Raydium, and others to steal users' mnemonic phrases—the essential keys to accessing their digital assets. What makes this campaign particularly dangerous is the use of seemingly legitimate applications, hosted under previously benign or compromised developer accounts, combined with a large-scale phishing infrastructure linked to over 50 domains. This not only extends the campaign's reach but also lowers the likelihood of immediate detection by traditional defenses' (Picture: Getty) Cyble recommends that people download apps only from verified developers, and to look at reviews before downloading anything. They also stress that people should be using reputable antivirus and internet security software packages on your devices such as PCs, laptops and phones. As per, they recommend using multi-factor authentication, and for even more security try using biometric data where you can (Picture: Getty)

Cybersecurity experts discover 20 apps skimming your digital wallet: 'Delete NOW'
Cybersecurity experts discover 20 apps skimming your digital wallet: 'Delete NOW'

Daily Mail​

time11-06-2025

  • Daily Mail​

Cybersecurity experts discover 20 apps skimming your digital wallet: 'Delete NOW'

Cybersecurity experts are warning that millions of people could be at risk of having their digital wallets emptied unless they delete several apps right away. A team at cybersecurity company Cyble has uncovered 20 apps that can trick people into handing over access of their cryptocurrency to hackers. The phony apps were found in the Google Play Store and impersonate trustworthy digital wallet apps available for download, using the same exact name or a close copy that could be easily overlooked. The fake apps include Pancake Swap, Suiet Wallet, Hyperliquid, Raydium, BullX Crypto, Meteora Exchange, Harvest Finance Blog, SushiSwap, and OpenOcean Exchange. These malicious apps also use identical or similar logos and designs to trick users into downloading them from the Google Play Store. Although the fake digital wallets use the same name as legitimate apps, people can tell if it's a phony by checking the developer name. The real PancakeSwap app will say that the developer is the PancakeSwap team, while the fake one that steals your money uses a developer 'package' that reads Cyble revealed that the other 11 apps that digital wallet users need to delete right away use variations of the app names for Suiet Wallet, Raydium, SushiSwap, Hyperliquid, BullX Crypto, and Harvest Finance blog, as well as different developer packages. Simply put, you may encounter multiple copies of the same SushiSwap app in the Google Play Store but only one of them is the real thing. Without checking the developer package and looking for other suspicious signs that the app is a fraud, you could download the wrong digital wallet and give a hacker a secret back door to your cryptocurrency. Key ways to spot a phony copy of a trust app include seeing a very low number of downloads. Normally, a popular app will have been downloaded thousands, if not millions, of times. A long list of positive reviews about the app on its Google Play Store page will also help prove that you've found the right one. Estimates show that more than 400 million people worldwide use cryptocurrency, including millions of Android owners. The fake apps are designed to trick users into entering their 12-word mnemonic phrase, a secret code used to access cryptocurrency wallets. Once entered, hackers can steal this phrase, gain access to your real wallet, and take your cryptocurrency, which can't be recovered once it's gone. Stolen cryptocurrency can't be returned because blockchain transactions are permanent, decentralized, and irreversible, giving users more anonymity than regular banking. The scheme could affect anyone who stores digital currencies like Bitcoin or Ethereum in one of these fraudulent wallets. Making the scam even harder to spot is the fact that researchers found the developer packages (or accounts) were at one time reputable app makers. 'These accounts were originally used to distribute legitimate apps, including gaming, video downloader, and live streaming applications, and some have amassed over 100,000 downloads,' the Cyble team wrote in their report. Hackers either compromised these accounts by stealing the login credentials of the original developers or repurposed them, meaning they bought or took over the accounts (legally or illegally) to use for their own purposes. Once in control of the app package, hackers used these trusted accounts to publish the 20 malicious cryptocurrency phishing apps, including the fake PancakeSwap and SushiSwap wallets. Since the accounts already had a history of being a legitimate service with high download numbers, the fake apps appeared to be almost as trustworthy as the real things in the Google Play Store. If you downloaded the fake wallet use your mnemonic phrase, hackers can access your actual cryptocurrency wallet on the blockchain, even if it's on a different app or device, since the phrase works universally for compatible wallets. The app itself is fake. It doesn't manage or store your crypto like a legitimate wallet. Instead, it's all a front to steal that security code. Once hackers have the phrase, they interact directly with the blockchain to move your real cryptocurrency to their wallets. To check if you've got the right app, go to your Android device's app settings or the Google Play Store to see if any of these apps (or their package names) are installed. Package names can be found in the Play Store under the app's details or in your device's app info. For iPhone users, Apple's App Store uses a stricter app review process. However, iPhone users aren't completely safe as similar phishing scams could target iOS through other means, like fake websites or unofficial app sources. Apple users can stay safe by sticking with downloads from the official App Store, avoid sideloading apps from unknown sources, and avoiding suspicious links in emails or texts asking for wallet details. Cyble Research and Intelligence Labs (CRIL) reported the fake apps to Google which has removed most of the apps, but some are still in the Play Store. 20 Malicious Digital Wallet Apps to Delete Immediately Pancake Swap - Package: Suiet Wallet - Package: Hyperliquid - Package: Raydium - Package: Hyperliquid - Package: BullX Crypto - Package: OpenOcean Exchange - Package: Suiet Wallet - Package: Meteora Exchange - Package: Raydium - Package: SushiSwap - Package: Raydium - Package: SushiSwap - Package: Hyperliquid - Package: Suiet Wallet - Package: BullX Crypto - Package: Harvest Finance blog - Package: Pancake Swap - Package: Hyperliquid - Package:

Delete these nine apps from your smartphone now
Delete these nine apps from your smartphone now

Irish Daily Mirror

time10-06-2025

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Delete these nine apps from your smartphone now

In our technologically advancing world, we're all guilty of trusting the internet too much without considering what we might be giving up in return. This is where mobile applications come into play. Our smartphones are brimming with them, with nearly two million on Apple's App Store and almost three million on Google's Play Store - all readily available and easily accessible. It's often said that your average person has around 100 apps downloaded. Of course, there are the usual social media platforms like X/Twitter, Facebook and Reddit, then you have news apps like The Mirror US' very own app available on all devices, plus dating apps like Tinder, Bumble, games like Clash of Clans, and many more. We're constantly urged by all the big mobile and security companies to only download applications from the official stores, but it turns out even that isn't guaranteed to keep you 100 per cent safe. Researchers at Cyble have uncovered a range of apps that had fooled their way onto the Play Store by imitating the names or icons of legitimate digital wallets, reports the Mirror US. Once these apps are installed onto your mobile device, they open a phishing website or an in-app WebView where they request mnemonic phrases that can be used to completely empty your wallet. Cyble found more than 20 different apps targeting crypto wallet users by impersonating well-known wallets like SushiSwap, PancakeSwap, Hyperliquid and Raydium. A total of nine wallets are currently being cloned, sparking fears that this could escalate and impact even more individuals. The Mirror US advises deleting particular apps immediately if found on your smartphone – make sure Google's Play Protect is activated to keep your device secure. Cybersecurity firm Cyble cautions: "[These apps] employ phishing techniques to steal users' mnemonic phrases, which are then used to access real wallets and drain cryptocurrency funds." They add, "They have been progressively discovered over recent weeks, reflecting an ongoing and active campaign." All newly identified rogue apps are reported to Google, who is actively working to eradicate them from the PlayStore. The Mirror US has approached Google for an official statement on these security concerns and awaits their response.

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