RSA stopped short of telling just what information or technology was taken by the attackers, however. Attack started with phishing email with an infected attachment, new details revealed today by RSA and Gartner. Attack then installed a Poison Ivy variant for remotely controlling the infected machine. The messages came with an Excel attachment that was rigged with the newly patched Adobe Flash zero-day, which was seen in limited targeted attacks earlier this month by Adobe Flash. Analyst: “This nasty habit of blaming the victim from a position of moral superiority has to stop””]