RT @arstechnica | One of the Internet’s most aggressive threats could take UEFI malware mainstream https://t.co/iu5SmaffsA
— 780th Military Intelligence Brigade (Cyber) (@780thC) December 3, 2020
One of the Internet’s most aggressive threats could take UEFI malware mainstream https://t.co/eOKfI0k8vo #BizIT #Tech #bootkits #malware
— Igor Os (@igor_os777) December 3, 2020
A new module of TrickBot appears to be targeting victim devices’ UEFI firmware, likely with the goal of infecting them with malicious code capable of evading antivirus, surviving a total wipe of the operating system, or bricking PCs. https://t.co/UEFw59ENyO
— Andy Greenberg (@a_greenberg) December 3, 2020
A new TrickBot module was discovered that can tamper with UEFI/BIOS firmware
— Catalin Cimpanu (@campuscodi) December 3, 2020
Security researchers fear the module could be used to improve the malware's persistence or used as part of destructive attackshttps://t.co/ozaRDNx58X pic.twitter.com/UPTGvDNM3o