Cybersecurity News and Vulnerability Aggregator

Cybersecurity news aggregator

Top Cybersecurity Stories Today

Bleeping Computer 4h ago

Maine has taken its public data breach reporting portal offline after fraudulent breach disclosures were published on the state's website, prompting a review of procedures to prevent abuse in the future. [...]

The Hacker News 11h ago
CVE

Cybersecurity researchers have described what they say is a new class of attack that can trick artificial intelligence (AI) coding agents into running arbitrary code on developer machines. Called Agentjacking by Tenet Security, the attack can be triggered by means of a fake error report crafted using Sentry, an open-source error-tracking and performance-monitoring platform. "The attack

The Hacker News 4h ago

Attackers took over more than 400 packages in the Arch User Repository (AUR) this week and rewrote their build scripts to install a credential stealer on any machine that built them. The malware is a Rust binary built to harvest developer secrets. When it lands with root, it can also load an eBPF rootkit to hide itself. The AUR is Arch Linux's community package collection, and it is separate

The Hacker News Jun 11

The ShinyHunters extortion crew exploited an unpatched flaw in Oracle PeopleSoft to break into enterprise systems, steal data, and demand payment to keep it private. The campaign hit universities hardest. Google's Mandiant attributes it to the group it tracks as UNC6240, and dates the activity between May 27 and June 9. Oracle did not publish its advisory until June 10, so the bug was a

The Hacker News Jun 11

A new analysis of The Gentlemen operation has revealed that the financially motivated threat group initially operated as an affiliate responsible for conducting double extortion attacks, while leveraging resources from various ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) schemes like LockBit (aka Tenacious Mantis), Qilin (aka Pestilent Mantis), and Medusa (aka Venomous Mantis). According to a detailed report

Latest

Friday, June 12
r/blueteamsec 1h ago
CVE

Hey r/blueteamsec , I built **RedSEC** — a Python tool that solves a problem I kept running into during penetration tests: you finish an engagement with output scattered across Nmap, Nikto, Gobuster, SQLMap, Hydra, and five other tools, and correlating all of it manually into a coherent attack chain takes hours. RedSEC automates that correlation. **What it does:** * Parses output from 9 offensive tools: Nmap, Nikto, Gobuster, SQLMap, Hydra, Metasploit, Nuclei, ffuf, Dirb * Correlates attack chains automatically via YAML rules * Maps every finding to MITRE ATT&CK tactics and techniques * Assigns detection risk scores (0.0–1.0) * Exports structured SEC-format detection rules (compatible with Risto Vaarandi's Simple Event Correlator) **Why SEC format?** Most correlation tools output reports for humans. RedSEC outputs detection rules that a blue team can actually deploy — closing the loop between offensive findings and defensive implementation. **Some numbers:** * 96 automated tests * CI/CD pipeline via GitHub Actions * YAML rules are fully customizable — easy to extend for your own tool set The project got some unexpected recognition — Risto Vaarandi (TalTech professor, creator of the SEC framework) gave positive feedback, and Clayton Dukes (CEO of LogZilla) reached out about potential integration. **GitHub:** [https://github.com/alisalive/RedSEC](https://github.com/alisalive/RedSEC) Happy to answer questions about the correlation logic, MITRE mapping approach, or the SEC rule export format.

watchTowr 3h ago
CVE

Three posts? In three days? Are we insane? We're home alone, there's no one to stop us, and we're up past bedtime. So, we need to talk about Splunk. On June 10th, Splunk published this CVE-2026-20253 advisory : It has everything that we love: No authentication requirements, An almost full-mark CVSS score, Claims to be a security product, Vulnerability name longer than the average piece of spaghetti. We immediately ha

Bleeping Computer 4h ago

Maine has taken its public data breach reporting portal offline after fraudulent breach disclosures were published on the state's website, prompting a review of procedures to prevent abuse in the future. [...]

The Hacker News 4h ago

Attackers took over more than 400 packages in the Arch User Repository (AUR) this week and rewrote their build scripts to install a credential stealer on any machine that built them. The malware is a Rust binary built to harvest developer secrets. When it lands with root, it can also load an eBPF rootkit to hide itself. The AUR is Arch Linux's community package collection, and it is separate

The Hacker News 4h ago

Google on Friday said it's pursuing legal action against a Chinese cybercrime network, accusing it of using its Gemini artificial intelligence (AI) agent to send phishing text messages targeting Americans. The network is said to be behind the development and management of a phishing-as-a-service (PhaaS) software kit called Outsider, per the tech giant. "The operation weaponized Gemini to help

The Hacker News 5h ago

Instead of hiding on the laptops and servers defenders watch most closely, a China-nexus group spent close to a decade hidden inside the Linux login system itself. Sygnia, which tracks the group as Velvet Ant, says it backdoored the PAM and OpenSSH components that decide who is allowed to sign in, planting its access where ordinary cleanup could not reach it. The network it targeted had no

Heimdal Security 8h ago

Heimdal sysadmin Alex Panait spent weeks testing Claude Cowork inside the company. His verdict was blunt. It felt like onboarding a junior employee with no manager, no scoped access, and no clear accountability when something goes wrong. Except this one can delete your SharePoint. That is the uncomfortable reality behind autonomous AI desktop assistants. They […] The post Your Next Insider Threat May Be an AI Coworker appeared first on Heimdal Security Blog .

Cloudflare 10h ago

Security Insights provides actionable security recommendations for every Cloudflare account. To find these insights, we perform regular scans for all accounts, zones, and DNS records, looking for potential security risks and misconfigurations. However, two key issues emerged. First, our scans were too infrequent. Scans were only being performed every week or two, and therefore newly introduced security risks could remain undetected for up to two weeks. Second, automatic scanning was opt-in for many free plan accounts – meaning lots of accounts weren’t being scanned at all. The risks of infrequent or nonexistent scans are rising: as automated attacks accelerate, the window for detecting security misconfigurations is shrinking. Making sure that we’re finding these issues for all of our customers is crucial to our aim of building a better Internet for everyone. We calculated that to increase our scanning frequencies and enable automatic scanning for all accounts, we would need to increase our scanning throughput by around 10x on average – from 10 scans per second to 100 per second. But our system was already struggling with its load: millions of events were filling up our backlog waiting to be processed; our API was frequently timing out; our processes were crashing. We needed to fix our system, and we needed to make it scale . This is the story of how we increased scanning throughput for Security Insights by more than 10x, enabled security insights for millions of customers, and doubled our scanning frequency for all customers. Read on to find out how we achieved these improvements. How we scan for security insights At a high level, our automatic security scans are triggered by a scheduler. When an account or zone is due for a s

r/cybersecurity 10h ago

a malicious pull request was submitted in a 57k star github repo Egonex-AI/Understand-Anything and the pr description was also convincing, the test plan was fake and the real payload is hidden behind hundreds of whitespace characters on the last diff line. `astro.config.mjs` runs as a live nodejs module on every dev or preview. there is no sandbox which basically means it will affect more than a postinstall script. The second stage actually pulled commands from a tron blockchain address which is a public RPC nodes only so IP blocking does nothing. complete breakdown is in the article

Heimdal Security 11h ago

Cybersecurity failures now happen beyond the OSI stack. Faulty governance, the human factor, and AI tools create new attack surfaces. After seven years working across cybersecurity, cloud infrastructure, and Zero Trust architecture, Jayal Yadav explains how we got here and what organizations still get wrong. “The original seven layers of the OSI model still matter. […] The post The OSI Model and Its Two Missing Layers appeared first on Heimdal Security Blog .

The Hacker News 11h ago
CVE

Cybersecurity researchers have described what they say is a new class of attack that can trick artificial intelligence (AI) coding agents into running arbitrary code on developer machines. Called Agentjacking by Tenet Security, the attack can be triggered by means of a fake error report crafted using Sentry, an open-source error-tracking and performance-monitoring platform. "The attack

Trail of Bits 12h ago

What happens when the bits of an RSA private key are heavily biased toward 0 instead of being randomly generated? The public key’s bits could be biased enough for us to detect these incorrectly generated keys in the wild. Together with Hanno Böck of the badkeys project, we found hundreds of unique keys that not only have this property, but can be quickly factored. We also found the bug that led to many of these keys and analyzed historical data to track the issue over time. Surprisingly, the pattern of 0 bits is often highly structured, allowing us to develop a powerful polynomial-based cryptanalytic technique that exploits the pattern. Figure 1: Two patterns of RSA moduli with repeated blocks of 0 bits seen in real-world examples. These “short-sleeve” keys, named for how the 0 bits don’t fully cover the limbs of the big integers, largely fell into two patterns. Pattern 1 remains unexplained, but we traced pattern 2 to a type mismatch in big-integer code from old versions of the CompleteFTP file transfer software. The CompleteFTP bug also generated vulnerable short-sleeve DSA keys, and we recovered 603 unique RSA private keys and 74 DSA keys from internet scans. If you used CompleteFTP to generate host keys between December 2016 and December 2023, CompleteFTP has released a tool to check whether your keys need to be regenerated. How we found

The Hacker News 12h ago
APT

For most of the past decade, managed detection and response was the answer to a real problem. Security teams couldn't staff around the clock, couldn't hire enough analysts, and needed someone else to handle the alert queue. MDR stepped in. It worked well enough. Until now. The threat landscape has changed faster than the MDR model can adapt. Attackers are using AI to move faster, generate more

The Hacker News 14h ago

An INTERPOL-led operation last month resulted in the disruption of Sniper Dz, a decade-long phishing-as-a-service (PhaaS) platform, Group-IB said Thursday. The effort, codenamed Operation Ramz, took place between October 2025 and February 2026, and saw authorities from 13 countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region making 201 arrests. Included among them was Guedz, the primary

The Hacker News 17h ago

Authorities in Europe have disrupted AudiA6, a cryptocurrency laundering service used by ransomware gangs and cybercriminal networks. Europol, in a statement issued Thursday, said the dismantling of AudiA6 cut off a "key financial pipeline used to wash hundreds of millions in illicit profits." The service is estimated to have been used to launder more than €336 million (~$389 million) since the

watchTowr 18h ago
CVE

It is yet another day in this parallel universe of security, where the devices we bolt onto the edge of our networks to keep the bad people out are, with remarkable consistency, the exact thing that let the bad people in. While we’ve seemingly had a breather from traditional SSL VPN exploitation season (you know, the one where every edge appliance vendor takes it in turns to have a very bad week ), it’s now time to pull up a chair and welcome ourselves back to another group therapy session. Welcome back to another watchTowr Labs blog post. On the 8th of June 2026, Check Point released hotfixes for a pair of vulnerabilities in their Mobile Access/SSL VPN, Remote Access VPN, and Spark Firewall products, specifically within the "deprecated" IKEv1 VPN code. The headline act was CVE-2026-50751, with a CVSS score of 9.3 for an Authentication Bypass. For the AI threat intel bots scraping our posts every few minutes (yes, we know), these vulnerabilities align with CWE-1337 Fun Fridays. Naturally, when the words “VPN” and “Authentication Bypass” are in the vicinity, a CISA KEV listing is not far behind - and this time is no exception. Various sources indicate that this vulnerability has been exploited in the wild since 7th May 2026 (roughly a month before anyone received a patch), and that, per Check Point, there were "a few dozen targeted organizations".

Thursday, June 11
The Hacker News Jun 11

The ShinyHunters extortion crew exploited an unpatched flaw in Oracle PeopleSoft to break into enterprise systems, steal data, and demand payment to keep it private. The campaign hit universities hardest. Google's Mandiant attributes it to the group it tracks as UNC6240, and dates the activity between May 27 and June 9. Oracle did not publish its advisory until June 10, so the bug was a

The Hacker News Jun 11

Security researcher Chaotic Eclipse (aka Nightmare-Eclipse and MSNightmare) has released a new Windows BitLocker bypass dubbed GreatXML, a day after they published an exploit for Microsoft Defender. "This was an accidental discovery, it took a total of 4 hours to find this," the researcher said in a post on Blogger. "If you ever attempted to use Windows Defender Offline Scan, you're

Synack Jun 11

On June 2, the White House signed a new executive order (EO), “Promoting Advanced Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Security.” While most coverage has focused on the voluntary framework for frontier model access, there’s language around defensive cybersecurity that also deserves attention from security leaders.The order directs CISA to establish or expand federal programs and cybersecurity […] The post What the New AI Executive Order Means for Federal Security Testing appeared first on Synack .

The Hacker News Jun 11

A new analysis of The Gentlemen operation has revealed that the financially motivated threat group initially operated as an affiliate responsible for conducting double extortion attacks, while leveraging resources from various ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) schemes like LockBit (aka Tenacious Mantis), Qilin (aka Pestilent Mantis), and Medusa (aka Venomous Mantis). According to a detailed report

r/netsec Jun 11

Despite all the hype around Mythos, Claude Fable 5 returned pretty mid-tier results on coding tasks: 59.8% passing functional solves and just 19.0% passing security solves on a benchmark of 200 real-world tasks.

CERT/CC Jun 11
CVE

Overview A vulnerability has been discovered in the Haskell TLS software stack, commonly used by applications built in the Haskell programming language to securely connect to servers over the internet. Specifically, the libraries "crypton-x509-validation" fail to enforce a key security feature called NameConstraints, a standard defined in RFC 5280 that helps organizations control which domains a certificate authority (CA) is allowed to issue certificates for. This vulnerability allows an attacker with access to the sub-CA to create certificates that will validate successfully with any Haskell TLS connection, allowing the attacker access to full session visibility. Version 1.91 for crypton-x509-validation have been released to address the vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2026-9648. Description Haskell is a programming language often used in enterprise, academic, and financial systems such as banks, insurance companies, and data processing platforms, which use it for backend services like fraud detection, risk modeling, and other sensitive connections. The Haskell TLS software stack is the implementation used by Haskell applications to establish secure HTTPS or TLS connections to servers, just like OpenSSL or Go’s TLS libraries do in other ecosystems. A vulnerability has been discovered within the stack; crypton-x509-validation , which do not enforce the NameContstraints security feature that other libraries, such as OpenSSL or Go, do. The description for CVE-2026-9648 is as follows: The crypton-x509-validation Haskell library fails to enforce X.509 NameConstraints, allowing TLS clients to accept certificates whose Subject Alternative Names fall outside the issuing CA’s permitted subtrees. This oversight enables an attacker who compromises a name-constrained sub-CA

The Hacker News Jun 11

Most good security work is invisible by design. Today is the exception. The 2026 Cybersecurity Stars Awards winners are announced across 95 subcategories in four main award categories. The reason is simple. Cybersecurity is full of work that deserves recognition and rarely gets it. Products that quietly close real gaps. Teams that stop incidents nobody reads about. Companies that raise the

r/Malware Jun 11
CVE

I designed a 99‑fixture adversarial PE corpus, where each binary contains one controlled corruption pattern with full ground‑truth metadata. The goal was to answer a simple question: **How do PE tools behave when the binary stops playing by the rules?** The fixtures cover 8 anomaly classes: * entrypoint manipulation   * section‑table corruption   * Optional Header inconsistencies   * directory contradictions   * TLS anomalies   * resource‑tree recursion   * Authenticode corruption   * entropy edge cases   I tested 6 tools representing the major parsing philosophies: * IOCX   * Ghidra   * Detect It Easy   * radare2   * PEview   * CFF Explorer   **The results were eye‑opening:** * **Literal tools** (r2, PEview) preserved bytes but surfaced no warnings   * **Semantic tools** (CFF)  normalised malformed fields, obscuring anomalies   * **Heuristic tools** (DIE) ignored structure entirely     * **Reconstructive loaders** (Ghidra) reconstructed internal models, omitting conflicting metadata and encountering crashes on entropy fixtures  * **Hybrid literal‑semantic tools** (IOCX)  preserved raw metadata and surfaced anomalies explicitly   **Full write-up:** [The Adversarial PE Analysis Series, Part 1 — Why PE Parsers Break](https://medium.com/@malx-labs/the-adversarial-pe-analysis-series-part-1-why-pe-parsers-break-introducing-the-99-adversarial-1769556ab473?source=friends_link&sk=a053eaffcc2642062af3931c49ba6064) **Corpus and fixture spec**: [https://github.com/iocx-dev/iocx](https://github.com/iocx-dev/iocx) (fixtures are under `/tests/contract/fixtures/layer3_adversarial)`

The Hacker News Jun 11

For thirty years, vulnerability management ran on a buffer: the months between when a vulnerability was found and when someone could figure out how to weaponize it. The solution was straightforward enough; triage by severity, schedule the fix, validate, and move on. The buffer was what made that work. Today, that buffer is gone. AI didn't make your team slower. It changed the other side of the

The Hacker News Jun 11

The Vietnam-aligned threat actor known as OceanLotus has been attributed to two distinct campaigns that targeted domestic entities and stock investors with a backdoor known as SPECTRALVIPER. The campaigns involve a prolonged cyber espionage operation aimed at a Vietnamese infrastructure and transport construction corporation between mid-2024 and February 2026, as well as a supply chain attack

The Hacker News Jun 11

GitHub has announced what it said are "breaking changes" coming to npm version 12, one of which turns off install scripts by default to combat software supply chain threats. The changes aim to combat attack techniques that abuse the "npm install" command to trigger the execution of malicious code using npm lifecycle hooks. "Npm install" is used to download and install all the necessary

Wednesday, June 10
Synack Jun 10

The curl project, one of the most important pieces of software on the internet, just shut down its bug bounty program. Not because the project is less important. Not because the community gave up. But because 95% of the vulnerability reports it received were not valid. About a fifth were outright AI-generated noise. Only around […] The post Nobody’s in the Cockpit: The Real Risk of Fully Autonomous AI Security Testing appeared first on Synack .

The Hacker News Jun 10

Cybersecurity researchers have warned of a "resurgence and expansion" of JDY, a covert network associated with China-nexus state-sponsored threat actors. "The JDY botnet comprises over 1,500 SOHO [small office and home office] and IoT devices and operates as a centrally controlled, high-performance scanner used to discover, fingerprint, and continuously map exposed services at scale," Lumen's

The Hacker News Jun 10
CVE

Fortinet, Ivanti, and SAP have released security updates to address multiple critical security vulnerabilities that could result in arbitrary code execution and information disclosure. The security flaw patched by Fortinet relates to a command injection vulnerability in FortiSandbox, FortiSandbox Cloud, and FortiSandbox PaaS WEB UI. It's tracked as CVE-2026-25089 (CVSS score: 9.1). "An

The Hacker News Jun 10
CVE

A high-severity security flaw in Langflow, an open-source low-code platform to build artificial intelligence (AI) applications, has come under active exploitation in the wild, according to findings from VulnCheck. The vulnerability in question is CVE-2026-5027 (CVSS score: 8.8), a case of path traversal that could allow an attacker to write files to arbitrary locations. "The 'POST /api/v2/

Cloudflare Jun 10

For most of the Internet’s history, public and private infrastructure operated as separate worlds. Public applications lived behind content delivery networks (CDNs) and web application firewalls (WAFs). Private applications lived behind virtual private networks (VPNs), firewalls, and separate operational stacks. We think that distinction is becoming obsolete. Many of the applications organizations care about are not public websites. They are internal APIs, AI agent backends, MCP servers, operational tools, and services that were never designed to be exposed to the public Internet. Yet these applications still need modern security, performance, and programmability services. Security should be a property of the traffic reaching an application, not an accident of where the application happens to sit. Until now, applying those services to private applications often required public IPs, firewall exceptions, connector software, or complex networking. As a result, many private applications missed out on capabilities such as WAF, bot management, rate limiting, caching, traffic acceleration, rewrites, and Workers, despite needing the same protections and controls as public-facing applications. Today, we're launching Application Services for Private Origins in closed beta for eligible Enterprise customers. Customers can now securely route traffic to private origins without exposing those origins to the public Internet. This allows Cloudflare's security, performance, and programmability services to protect applications running on private networks, just as they do for public Internet applications. WAF rules, bot management, rate limiting, caching, rewrites, and Workers can now sit in front of private origins without requiring public IP exposure, inbound firewall rules, or cloudflared running on the origin. Four use cases, one application layer

WIRED Jun 10

From anti-drone tech to face recognition, 2026 World Cup stadiums in the US, Canada, and Mexico are subjecting fans to an array of surveillance tech. Here’s what you need to know.

r/computerforensics Jun 10

I built a CLI tool for Windows that investigates software remnants across 22 forensic modules in a single pass. The problem it solves: after uninstalling software, Windows rarely cleans everything. Registry keys, prefetch entries, scheduled tasks, WMI subscriptions, BAM/DAM timestamps and more often stay behind. GhostTrace finds all of it in one scan. **Forensic coverage:** * **Persistence (MITRE ATT&CK TA0003):** Run/RunOnce keys, services with suspicious ImagePath (T1543.003), IFEO debugger, AppInit\_DLLs, LSA packages, scheduled tasks via Task Scheduler COM API, WMI EventFilter/Consumer bindings (T1546.003), Ghost Tasks in TaskCache\\Tree (T1053.005) * **Execution evidence (TA0002):** Shimcache/AppCompatCache, Prefetch with XPRESS-Huffman decode (versions 26/30/31), BAM/DAM with per-SID last-run timestamps, UserAssist (ROT13 decoded), MUICache * **User activity:** PowerShell history with cradle/encoded payload detection (T1059.001), RDP outbound history (T1021.001), RecentDocs, USB device history via USBSTOR (T1052/T1091), network artifacts (hosts redirects + connected networks with dates) * **Installed software and disk residue:** Uninstall entries with publisher/path/uninstall string, startup approved state, filesystem trace in Program Files/ProgramData/AppData **Design decisions relevant to forensics:** * Read-only by default — scan never modifies anything * Execution caches and history are excluded from cleanup — evidence is preserved * Cleanup requires explicit typed confirmation * Zero network calls, zero telemetria — safe in air-gapped environments * Suspicious signal is data for analysis, not an automatic verdict * Each cleanup generates an audit log **Stack:** C# · .NET 10 · Spectre.Console · Windows 10/11 x64 Download: [github.com/Devzinh/GhostTrace](https://github.com/Devzinh/GhostTrace) Happy to answer questions about the forensic modules or implementation decisions.

Troy Hunt Jun 10

Presently sponsored by: Report URI: Guarding you from rogue JavaScript! Don’t get pwned; get real-time alerts & prevent breaches #SecureYourSite 1,000 breaches is one hell of a milestone. It's not just the process of getting data, verifying it, loading it, sending notifications etc, it's all the other stuff that goes into keeping the whole thing afloat. Legal docs. Trademarks. Accounting. Agreements. The most mind-numbingly boring stuff you can imagine happening in the background so that the stuff you see in the foreground can all work. And then there are those "other things" I had to deal with along the way, but more of that in this week's video. Thanks to everyone who has stuck around to see this thing reach such a milestone 

watchTowr Jun 10
CVE

Today, Ivanti published an advisory. “No way?” we hear you say. "Yes way!" Today’s advisory outlines two vulnerabilities in Ivanti’s Sentry product, appealing directly to our inner desire for sophisticated server-side, pre-authenticated vulnerabilities. CVE-2026-10520 An OS Command Injection vulnerability in Ivanti Sentry before the R10.5.2, R10.6.2 and R10.7.1 versions allows a remote unauthenticated user to achieve root-level remote code execution (Credit to Unknown, but not us) CVE-2026-10523 An Authentication Bypass vulnerability (CWE-288) in Ivanti Sentry before the R10.5.2, R10.6.2 and R10.7.1 versions allows a remote unauthenticated attacker to create arbitrary administrative accounts and obtain full administrative access (Credit to Bryan Lam)

Tuesday, June 9
Krebs on Security Jun 9

Microsoft today released software updates to plug nearly 200 security holes across its Windows operating systems and supported software, a record number of fixes for the company’s monthly Patch Tuesday cycle. Nearly three dozen of those bugs earned Microsoft’s most dire “critical” rating, and exploit code for at least three of the weaknesses is now publicly available. The software giant said in a blog post last month that both its engineers and the security community are increasing using artificial intelligence tools to find bugs, meaning this month’s heavy Patch Tuesday may start to become the norm, said Satnam Narang , senior staff research engineer at Tenable . “Some surveys put AI usage among security professionals generally at 90%, so it’s unsurprising that this volume of patches may be the norm,” Narang said. “Pandora’s proverbial box has been opened, and as more advanced AI models become available, we expect the norm to continue upward across the board, not just for Patch Tuesday.” June’s zero-day bugs include CVE-2026-49160 , a denial of service vulnerability affecting a range of web servers, including Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS). Microsoft says the flaw was reported by OpenAI’s Codex. Two of the zero-days addressed this month appear to stem from recent vulnerability disclosures by Nightmare Eclipse , the nickname chosen by a security researcher who has been dropping exploits for various Windows flaws. One of those, dubbed “GreenPlasma,” leverages an elevation of privilege weakness in the Windows Collaborati

Praetorian Jun 9

Writing my own virtualized loader is something I’ve been wanting to do since I first read Microsoft’s deep dive on FinFisher’s multi-layered VM obfuscation back in 2018. FinFisher didn’t just use one layer of protection, it implemented a custom virtual machine with 32 opcode handlers, wrapped that in spaghetti code and anti-debug checks, and then buried a second VM inside the 64-bit payload. Microsoft’s researchers had to write their own IDA plugins and build a full opcode interpreter just to understand what the malware was doing. The idea that you could interpose an entire bytecode interpreter between your real logic and an analyst’s tools, making both static and dynamic analysis incredibly difficult, stuck with me. I made real progress toward this over

Synack Jun 9

AI is changing the economics of offensive security. Models can now accelerate vulnerability discovery, reason about attack paths, draft exploit logic, and speed up remediation guidance. For defenders, that is a meaningful step forward. It is also the hard part. The capabilities that help defenders move faster also help attackers because cyber AI is dual-use […] The post Trusted Access, Human Validation, and the Future of AI Pentesting appeared first on Synack .

CERT/CC Jun 9
CVE

Overview Microsoft-signed UEFI bootloaders of the open-source shim project, primarily from version 0.9 and earlier, were identified as vulnerable to Secure Boot bypass. To mitigate this risk, the affected bootloaders will be added to the Microsoft UEFI Forbidden Signature Database (DBX). Once the DBX update is applied, these bootloaders will no longer be trusted for execution during the boot process. An attacker could exploit these vulnerable shim bootloaders using a Bring Your Own Vulnerable Driver (BYOVD)-style technique to execute arbitrary code during the early boot phase, prior to operating system initialization, thereby bypassing Secure Boot protections. Description The Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) standard defines the modern firmware architecture used to initialize hardware and transfer control to the operating system during system startup. On systems with Secure Boot enabled, UEFI applications and drivers must be cryptographically signed and verified before execution. Trust for these signatures is established through several firmware-managed databases, including the authorized signature database (DB), which commonly contains the "Microsoft Corporation UEFI CA 2011" certificate. This Microsoft certificate is widely used to sign third-party boot components intended to run under Secure Boot. The open-source UEFI shim project is a small, signed bootloader that Microsoft signed using the "Microsoft Corporation UEFI CA 2011" certificate. Shim acts as a bridge between the motherboard's UEFI firmware and the operating system (typically a Linux distribution). Its purpose is to allow Linux distributions to boot with Secure Boot enabled without requiring every individual distribution's key to be built into the motherboard's NVRAM settings. In doing so, shim allows Linux distributions and other third parties to esta

The Guardian Jun 9

Tech company says it ‘caught and disrupted’ NSO Group’s attempts to access accounts in Jordan and Lebanon A spyware firm has been targeting WhatsApp users with malicious links in contravention of a US court order forbidding it from doing so, Meta has said. In a post, Meta said WhatsApp had “caught and disrupted spear phishing attempts” by NSO Group, which a spokesperson said targeted a handful of users in Jordan and Lebanon. It had also caught the group creating “test accounts and groups” on WhatsApp. Continue reading...

r/computerforensics Jun 9

Worm is a desktop forensic acquisition tool for authorized investigations. It brings disk imaging, memory acquisition, Android collection, hash verification, case output handling, image viewing, and reporting into one native application. The app runs as a real desktop window on Linux and Windows. [https://github.com/noirlang/worm](https://github.com/noirlang/worm) [https://worm.noirlang.tr/](https://worm.noirlang.tr/)

r/netsec Jun 9

I scanned Chrome extension manifests for **chrome\_settings\_overrides** and found 23 extensions silently routing 758,000 users' searches through hidden monetization networks. The pattern: install a free extension (satellite imagery, maps, news reader), your default search gets quietly replaced and every query goes through the operator's middleware before reaching a search network, generating affiliate revenue you never consented to. Key findings: * 8 distinct brokers behind these extensions. If one extension gets pulled, another goes up under a different name. * Several extensions have zero functionality beyond the search override * One extension affirmatively claims "We don't track your searches" while its own privacy policy says otherwise * One uses runtime **declarativeNetRequest** injection so the real behavior is invisible to static analysis The \`hspart\` parameter in the final search redirect URL is the clustering key. One value maps an entire broker network regardless of extension name, domain, or publisher identity. Full report: [https://malext.io/reports/SearchJack/](https://malext.io/reports/SearchJack/)

Cloudflare Jun 9

A few weeks ago, we wrote about Project Glasswing and what we observed when we pointed cyber frontier models at our own code. Since then, we’ve seen that the part of the post that has resonated most deeply is the argument that the architecture around the vulnerability matters more than the speed of the patch. In the conversations we've had with CISOs and security teams since, the questions have been consistent: what does our architecture actually look like, what should we monitor for, where do we start, and how can Cloudflare help? Before getting into the details: the architecture below is built almost entirely from Cloudflare's own products, because Cloudflare security is customer zero for the security products we build. The Cloudflare stack already exists in front of our code, employees, and customer-facing applications. If you're a Cloudflare customer, every layer below is available to you today. If you're not, the principles still apply to whatever stack you've built. What a cyber frontier model actually changes In the previous post , we showed how a cyber frontier model like Mythos changes the attacker’s timeline. It can find vulnerabilities, reason through exploit chains, and generate working proofs faster than earlier models. While models like Mythos do not change the shape of an intrusion — reconnaissance, initial access, lateral movement, persistence, and exfiltration still have to happen — the difference is in the speed and scale. When pointed at the open web, a model can find and hit low-hanging fruit quickly. Against a hardened target, it still has to probe, and adapt, and it often produces

Monday, June 8
Cloudflare Jun 8
APT

Cloudflare’s Threat Events provides security analysts with a window into the global threat landscape. The platform offers a peek into the immense traffic that Cloudflare processes every day, so you can see in real time which IPs are attacking specific industries or which threat actors are trending globally. However, translating that visibility into active mitigation has often been a manual, reactive process. Security teams have faced a recurring frustration: knowing that certain IP addresses were associated with specific threat actors (like Tycoon 2FA or RaccoonO365 ) or had been seen targeting their specific industry in other regions, but they couldn't easily automate the blocking of these high-risk IPs within their own WAF unless they manually configured the rules. We are excited to announce a new integration that brings Cloudflare’s vast threat intelligence directly into your WAF engine: you can now write proactive rules using live intelligence data . This means you can add more intelligence context to protect your application against known bad actors — before they even attempt to touch your infrastructure. By populating specialized fields during the early stages of a request, the WAF can now screen traffic based on: Who is attacking by matching specific threat actor names Who they are targeting via the industry or country filters to see who the IP has targeted in the past What type of attack using enriched

Heimdal Security Jun 8

COPENHAGEN, Denmark, June 8, 2026 – Heimdal has achieved ISAE 3000 SOC 2 Type II certification for the sixth consecutive year, reflecting the company’s continued focus on operational security, accountability, and data protection. The 2026 audit covered the period from 1 April 2025 to 31 March 2026 and examined Heimdal’s controls across access management, data […] The post Heimdal® Marks Six Years of Consecutive ISAE 3000 SOC 2 Type II Certification appeared first on Heimdal Security Blog .

r/ReverseEngineering Jun 8

To reduce the amount of noise from questions, we have disabled self-posts in favor of a unified questions thread every week. Feel free to ask any question about reverse engineering here. If your question is about how to use a specific tool, or is specific to some particular target, you will have better luck on the [Reverse Engineering StackExchange](http://reverseengineering.stackexchange.com/). See also /r/AskReverseEngineering.

Sunday, June 7
r/netsec Jun 7
CVE

I recently learned about multiple sandbox bypasses discovered in Twig by project Glasswing. From the descriptions, only CVE-2026-46640 and CVE-2026-46633 seemed universally exploitable, so I decoded to research them. This writeup documents my development of payloads for the CVE-2026-46640 and the corresponding SSTImap module.

Saturday, June 6
Story Overview