TrueConf's Zero-Day Lets Hackers Infiltrate Southeast Asian Governments
Early 2026: Attackers slip into Southeast Asian government networks via a TrueConf zero-day, CVSS 7.8. Legit software turns traitor—brilliant, if you're the bad guy.
Early 2026: Attackers slip into Southeast Asian government networks via a TrueConf zero-day, CVSS 7.8. Legit software turns traitor—brilliant, if you're the bad guy.
Picture this: your air-gapped government server, supposedly ironclad, quietly serving malware to dozens of clients. That's TrueConf's zero-day nightmare, courtesy of Chinese hackers.
Imagine your video call app turning into a hacker's playground. That's TrueConf's nightmare: a zero-day flaw letting attackers poison updates across government networks.
Picture this: your boardroom video call morphs into a silent malware installer across dozens of endpoints. TrueConf's zero-day just made that nightmare real for enterprises worldwide.