![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjkIie_uEQcE07F6StyHbONjMWGetbYKHd9hDHHNXtVUPmb1oG-l5_saFKGTbxX9cBBtyEikbx2qST1DBN12gpfiRbIameMk31Vy9Vbkh6U5rlaXyH6hz-YFiKv73LGfRhaOMEAHeTm0V7Jr92Rk0RHDSx9XWvQRl9Ce9fWNrZpufbddWuygPzy6rqvVidU/s1600/jumpcloud.jpg)
A little over a week after JumpCloud reset API keys of customers impacted by a security incident, the company said the intrusion was the work of a sophisticated nation-state actor.
The adversary “gained unauthorized access to our systems to target a small and specific set of our customers,” Bob Phan, chief information security officer (CISO) at JumpCloud, said in a post-mortem report. “The
Source:: The Hackers News