The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has added two maximum-severity security flaws impacting iCagenda and Balbooa extensions for Joomla to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog, following reports of zero-day exploitation in the wild. The vulnerabilities, both rated 10.0 on the CVSS scoring system, are below - CVE-2026-48939 - A vulnerability in the
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treemd <(curl -sL https://allsec.sh/md) (as Markdown) Top Cybersecurity Stories Today
A new phishing-as-a-service (PhaaS) operation called Forg365 is using a combination of device code phishing, adversary-in-the-middle (AitM) tactics, antibot evasion, artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted lure creation, and post-compromise mailbox operations targeting Microsoft 365 accounts. Distributed via Telegram and costing $400 a month (or $3,800 per year), attack chains leverage phishing
VU#849433: Adalo Database API Enables Cross-App User Data Extraction via Over-Fetching and Missing Authorization Controls
Overview Adalo’s no‑code application platform exposes complete user records through its database API for all applications built on both V1 and V2. Due to a platform-level flaw, authenticated users can retrieve full user data belonging to any Adalo application, regardless of configuration. This issue affects more than one million applications and placing developers and their end users at risk of data exposure that they cannot prevent or remediate. Description Adalo is a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) provider for building no-code applications. In theory, each application or tenant (customer) is logically isolated with separate databases, users, and configurations. CVE-2026-10706 Unrestricted Disclosure of Full User Records The Adalo database API contains a flaw which allows the backend to return complete user records for every list component request, regardless of which fields the component is configured to display. The database does not enforce ownership‑aware, server‑side authorization checks, allowing authenticated users of any Adalo application to query database and table identifiers belonging to other applications and retrieve full records, including fields not requested. This issue is amplified by the permissive CORS policy, plaintext storage of all text files and evidence suggests that deleted records may remain accessible. CVE-2026-10708 Exposure and Reuse of Long-Lived JWT Tokens The JWT tokens are visible in client‑side requests and remain valid for approximately twenty days. Once copied, they can be reused from any external website or script to query the database API directly. Because the platform allows requests from any origin, attackers can repeatedly query the API and extract large volumes of user data without interacting with the applica
Today, the UK government launched the Cyber Resilience Pledge : a voluntary framework inviting organizations to commit to foundational cybersecurity governance, board-level accountability, and comprehensive cybersecurity coverage across supply chains. Cloudflare is proud to join the pledge’s founding cohort of signatories and continue our long-standing work with the Department of Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT), National Cyber Security Centre, and others to shape a more secure, future-ready digital economy for the UK . The pledge's core pillars — democratizing security, leadership accountability, and radical transparency — have been at the heart of Cloudflare since day one. Instead of approaching this framework as a new set of commitments to meet, we see it as a welcome validation from the UK government of the security philosophy and principles Cloudflare has championed for over a decade. We are glad to see the rest of the industry moving in this direction. This pledge is an important step, and it comes at a time of significant cyber risk. In the first quarter of 2026, Cloudflare's global network blocked an average of 234 billion cyber threats every day . Recently, we mitigated a hyper-volumetric DDoS attack that peaked at 31.4 Tbps . At th
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Found a browser-driven exposure intelligence platform. Here's the architecture. Where would this fit—or fail—in your workflow? [https://pypi.org/project/netbear/](https://pypi.org/project/netbear/) pip install netbear
A new phishing-as-a-service (PhaaS) operation called Forg365 is using a combination of device code phishing, adversary-in-the-middle (AitM) tactics, antibot evasion, artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted lure creation, and post-compromise mailbox operations targeting Microsoft 365 accounts. Distributed via Telegram and costing $400 a month (or $3,800 per year), attack chains leverage phishing
Bot mitigation is an adversarial game: attackers adapt, defenders respond, and the cycle continues. At Cloudflare, we stay ahead by combining visibility across our global network with signals from the client-side environment. At the network level, we analyze over 1 trillion requests per day to understand reputation, patterns, and anomalies across more than 20% of the web. On the client side, we’ve pushed detection deeper with Cloudflare Turnstile , which has evolved from a CAPTCHA replacement to a risk-based managed challenge that adapts the amount of friction needed to verify the user is authentic. Today, Turnstile runs nearly 3 billion times per day on some of the most sensitive endpoints on the Internet, helping verify users at key moments like login, signup, and checkout. This improves protection on the most important areas of customer applications, but still leaves limited visibility into the rest of the application — how humans and bots actually interact across the full user journey. This is the visibility gap we’re closing today with our launch of Precursor . Introducing Precursor Precursor is a client-side, session-based verification system, built with privacy in mind, that uses dynamically injected JavaScript to continuously collect behavioral signals as visitors interact with your application. These signals are processed and incorporated into Cloudflare’s bot protection in real time, allowing us to continuously distinguish human traffic from automated or agentic traffic. This extends the client-side detections offered by a
Meta has filed a patent application for an AI that listens to your voice throughout the day, works out how it thinks you are feeling from the way you sound, and keeps a timestamped log of every read. Each read gets pinned to the moment it happened: the time, your location, what you were doing, even how you were using your phone. Some versions in the filing would listen all day; others would
A few days ago, I was sitting with the CISO of a Fortune 50 company, walking through how his security team was thinking about AI agents in the SOC. Smart team. Serious program. They had already connected Claude to a few detection tools and were seeing real value in specific investigations. But as we mapped out the broader architecture, something kept nagging at me. The design they were building
Cybersecurity researchers have flagged an intrusion in which an unknown threat actor leveraged a vibe-coded PowerShell script for Active Directory (AD) enumeration. "The script looked for the Domain Controller (DC) and mapped users, computers, and domains, before creating a directory and exporting out a number of files, and finally creating AD_Report.html to measure the success of the
We’ve added a new chapter to our Testing Handbook : a comprehensive guide to security testing Rust programs. This chapter covers the tools and techniques we use at Trail of Bits to validate the security of Rust programs and systems. fn main () {( | f: & dyn Fn ( u128 )-> Box < dyn Iterator < Item =
The SFPD’s exposure of hours of videos from drone platform Skydio reveals how broadly it’s watching the city from above—and how the results can spill online.
An attacker running a live Microsoft 365 phishing operation left a Python web server listening on a public port with directory listing switched on. The command that did it: python3 -m http.server 8080, was still sitting in the readable .bash_history. From that one lapse, French security firm Lexfo lifted the operator's entire toolkit and pivoted through it to two more
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.
Anybody else experienced increasingly odd or malicious behavior impacting the plethora of third-party CMS packages out there?
The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has added two maximum-severity security flaws impacting iCagenda and Balbooa extensions for Joomla to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog, following reports of zero-day exploitation in the wild. The vulnerabilities, both rated 10.0 on the CVSS scoring system, are below - CVE-2026-48939 - A vulnerability in the
Hi everyone, I'm looking for participants for my Master's practicum research at Dublin City University (DCU). The study is an interactive simulation based on the EU AI Act, where you'll make decisions about the governance of a high-risk AI recruitment system. It takes around 10–15 minutes to complete, and all responses are completely anonymous. I'm hoping to gather perspectives from people interested in AI, whether you're a professional, student, or enthusiast. Your participation would really help with my research. Thank you so much!
A verified, curated map of malware analysis & reverse engineering — every link opened and checked, no dead pages
This sub is malware-focused, so here's what's in it for that side specifically (the repo is broader, but the malware coverage is the core): * **Analysis workflow:** lab setup (FLARE-VM, REMnux), triage (DIE, capa, FLOSS), static/dynamic (PE-bear, Procmon, CAPE, Speakeasy), unpacking (unpac.me, PE-sieve, HollowsHunter, Scylla), config & IOC extraction (MalDuck, DC3-MWCP), and YARA (rules, yarGen, testing workflows). * **Internals writeups:** PEB walking / API hashing, process hollowing and doppelgänging, PPID spoofing, BYOVD, COFF/BOF loaders, plus real family teardowns (stealers, ransomware, Lazarus/FudModule, the Stuxnet dossier). * Research labs and analyst blogs (Securelist, Unit 42, Talos, Elastic, n1ght-w0lf, Embee, hasherezade, MalwareTech...) folded into the relevant section instead of a generic "blogs" dump. * *Every link was opened and verified before it went in; dead ones get pruned, notes are one line, tagged by level (intro/working/deep) and type.* **CC0, and corrections/PRs are welcome, if there's a teardown or tool you think** **is missing, tell me. That's the point.**
[Open Source] My antiphishing Suricata ruleset is now officially in suricata-update! Looking for dashboard devs & telemetry contributors.
Hi Blue Teamers, I'm proud to share that my open-source security project, **julioliraup/Antiphishing**, has been accepted and integrated into the official global `suricata-update` source index! I built this pipeline from scratch to dynamically track and block active phishing infrastructure. The engine aggregates data from trusted community resources (like PhishStats and OpenPhish) to generate automated TLS, DNS, and HTTP rules (SID range 6000000 - 6100000). ### Project Architecture & Navigation: * **The Ruleset:** High-frequency signature updates to stop fast-cycling phishing domains. * **Threat Intel Lookup Portal:** We host a companion web application at https://julioliraup.github.io/AT to visualize and query active threat vectors. ### Deployment & Stability: Because network security requires stability, we make sure our rules don't break your standard traffic. You can implement it safely following our verified documentation: * Standalone sensors: [GNU/Linux Deployment Wiki](https://github.com/julioliraup/Antiphishing/wiki/Configuration-Ruleset-on-GNU-Linux) * Edge firewalls: [pfSense Configuration Guide](https://github.com/julioliraup/Antiphishing/wiki/Configuration-Ruleset-on-pfSense) *(Note: OPNsense has officially merged our pull request, and native GUI support will be live in their upcoming system release cycle!).* ### How You Can Help Evolve the Project 🚀 The project is fully open-source (GPL-v3). If you want to contribute, I am currently looking for: 1. **Frontend/Data Devs:** To help scale and optimize the dashboard UI/UX and lookup capabilities of the /AT portal. 2. **Threat Intel Contributors:** If you manage honeypots or have specialized phishing feeds, your data inputs are highly welcome. 3. **Beta Testers:** Run the ruleset, share your feedback, and report any false positives via GitHub Issues. Check out the repository, drop a star if you find it useful, and let's make phishing detection stronger together! Repo: https://github.com/julioliraup/Antiphishing
Vulnerability in Realtek driver allows DMA controller abuse from user mode with no additional hardware or driver
The vulnerability allows non-privileged users to program the DMA controller, enabling arbitrary physical memory reads and writes.
Hand-crafted 974-byte Android 14 APK (API 34) — Bypassing build-tool bloat by exploiting PackageInstaller structure.
AnyDesk logs the operator's real IP to disk. NetFlow, proxy, EDR network events: all show the relay. Dead end. The host trace file has the actual source. Grep "Logged in from": Service: %PROGRAMDATA%\\AnyDesk\\ad\_svc.trace Portable: %APPDATA%\\AnyDesk\\ad.trace Source - https://x.com/i/status/2075606692335956016
The jscrambler npm package was compromised, and simply installing its 8.14.0 release runs an infostealer on your machine. Published on July 11, 2026, the malicious version carries a preinstall hook that drops and executes a native binary, one build each for Windows, macOS, and Linux. Socket flagged the release six minutes after it was published. If you or one of your
Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed details of sustained cyber espionage activity against several Pakistani law enforcement organizations undertaken by suspected China- and India-aligned threat actors between February 2024 and April 2026. "At Balochistan Police, the compromised assets included servers hosting web applications that manage police and citizen data, such as criminal and
A read-only, deterministic file-observer that emits a hashed, reproducible manifest — where would this fall short for real casework?
Up front: I'm an enthusiast, not a forensics professional, and this is not a validated forensics tool — it's not write-blocking, it hasn't been through any formal tool-validation, and I'm not going to pretend otherwise. I built it for reproducible file observation and I keep thinking it might be useful for first-pass triage, but the people who'd actually know are here, not where I usually hang out. So I'd rather you tell me where it falls short than nod along. ## What it does file-observer walks a directory and emits a single deterministic JSON manifest describing every file. It's read-only — it never writes to a file, never executes file content, and never modifies source. (Like any triage tool, you'd point it at a working copy or a mounted image, not originals.) The properties that made me think of this sub: - **Reproducible output.** Same bytes in → byte-identical manifest out, every run, regardless of worker count (there's a test that fails CI if a parallel scan differs from a serial one). It's determinism, not tool-validation — but the output is stable enough to diff and defend. - **SHA-256 per file**, plus identical-hash duplicate clustering across the tree. - **Content-vs-extension MIME mismatch + polyglot detection** — flags a file whose actual signature doesn't match its extension, and files that satisfy more than one format's structure. Useful for spotting renamed or disguised files. - **Metadata extraction, stdlib, bounded and never-crashing on hostile input:** image EXIF (make/model, timestamps, and GPS-presence — presence, deliberately not coordinates), video container/QuickTime capture fields (device make/model, creation dates, GPS-presence), PDF producer/creator/creation-date/encryption + a born-digital-vs-scanned/OCR provenance read, email envelopes (.eml/.msg: from/to/subject/date/message-id/attachments), and Office/OLE2 document fields. - **Structural safety flags** — has_macros (VBA), has_javascript (PDF), has_ole_objects, has_external_references. Observations, not verdicts. - **Integrity envelope** — optional HMAC-SHA256 manifest signature and a previous_manifest_checksum chain, if you want a tamper-evident record of the observation itself. - **Delta between two scans** — what was added/modified/removed since a prior manifest. Everything runs bounded and read-only, and it degrades to a per-file error record rather than crashing on a malformed or hostile file. ## Where I know it's weak (and where I don't) Honest limits: it's triage/observation, not analysis — no carving, no timeline, no registry/artifact parsing. Metadata is bounded observation, so a null means "not seen within the read window," not "not present." GPS is presence-only by design. And reproducible ≠ validated — I've oracle-checked the parsers against tools like exiftool, but that's not the same as CFTT-style validation. What I don't know is whether any of this is actually useful in a real workflow, or whether it's a toy next to the tooling you already trust. That's the question. Where would this break, mislead, or fail to matter for real casework? ## Try it pip install "file-observer[all]" Repo: https://github.com/russalo/file-observer I'd genuinely rather hear "here's why this is useless for X" than a pat on the head — I'm isolated from people who do this for a living, and that's exactly the gap I'm trying to close.
Plus: The Pentagon is training amateurs to become part of its hacker army, a Flock license plate reader error led to cops surrounding a car reviewer, and more.
Caeruleus – Latin, deep blue The Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) tooling space is fragmented and decaying. Picture a typical BLE testing session: you spin up bettercap to run ble.recon and ble.enum , your trusty (but deprecated) gatttool to read and write handles, and, when it’s time to fuzz that one writable characteristic, dig up that custom Bleak script you copy-paste between directories and projects. That’s the BLE testing tax, and we got tired of paying it. So we built Caeruleus : a single Go binary that covers the whole BLE lifecycle, built on top of the BlueZ stack for Linux. Caeruleus lets you scan, enumerate, read/write/notify characteristics, fuzz, and run structured security assessment workflows against your Bluetooth Low Energy devices. The BLE tes
Overview GNU Wget, versions 1.25.0 and earlier, contains a server-side request forgery (SSRF) vulnerability in its implementation of FTP passive mode. Because Wget does not properly validate IP addresses obtained from PASV responses, an attacker-controlled FTP endpoint can redirect the client’s connection to arbitrary IPs, potentially exposing internal network host and service responses. This vulnerability has been remediated in a recent update by GNU; see the Solutions section below for resolution guidance. Description GNU Wget is a widely used command-line utility for retrieving content over HTTP, HTTPS, and FTP. When operating over FTP in passive mode, Wget relies on the server’s PASV response to determine which IP address and port to use for the data connection. CVE-2026-15146 GNU Wget does not validate the IP address provided by an FTP PASV response while operating in FTP passive mode. A malicious FTP server, or an HTTP server that redirects to an FTP URL, can exploit this behavior to redirect Wget’s data connection to an arbitrary IP address and port. This allows an attacker to forge server-side requests (SSRF) from the machine running Wget, potentially accessing localhost services or internal network resources. This issue belongs to a known class of FTP PASV vulnerabilities such as CVE-2021-40491 , which was previously remediated in GNU Inetutils. Impact A remote attacker controlling or influencing an FTP endpoint can induce Wget to establish connections to otherwise inaccessible internal network addresses. This may allow the attacker to retrieve service banners, access internal HTTP endpoints, or exfiltrate data from internal systems reach
Google has flagged the widely-installed HTTP header editor ModHeader as malware Microsoft already pulled it from Edge on July 3. \[MalExt Sentry - Malicious Browser Extension Tracker\](https://malext.io/?q=ModHeader) \* 900k installs on chrome | idgpnmonknjnojddfkpgkljpfnnfcklj \* 700k installs on edge | opgbiafapkbbnbnjcdomjaghbckfkglc
URGENT - Progress Tells ShareFile Customers to Shut Down Storage Zone Controllers Over Security Threat
Progress Software has told ShareFile customers to shut down the Windows servers running their Storage Zone Controllers, confirming to The Hacker News that it is responding to a "credible external security threat." The company has temporarily disabled access to the affected accounts, a step it says it took "out of an abundance of caution" while it works with internal and external security
Unknown threat actors compromised the Injective Labs SDK project's GitHub repository and leveraged it to publish a malicious package on the npm registry to steal cryptocurrency wallet private keys and mnemonic seed phrases. The compromised version, @injectivelabs/sdk-ts@1.20.21, came embedded with fake telemetry functionality that exfiltrated data from cryptocurrency wallets. The version was
Researchers at firmware security firm Binarly have found six new flaws in U-Boot, the small program that starts up hardware as varied as home routers, smart cameras, and the management chips inside data-center servers. Four of the bugs can crash a device. The other two could let an attacker who slips a malicious image in front of the bootloader run their own code, before the device
Researchers at Ledger's Donjon security team have shown that a precisely timed laser pulse, aimed at the chip inside a Tangem crypto wallet card, can reset the card's password to anything the attacker picks. No old password. No backup card. Once it is reset, whoever did it controls the wallet and can move the coins out. This is not an emergency for most owners. The attack needs
Details have emerged about three now-patched security flaws in the OpenClaw personal artificial intelligence (AI) assistant that, if successfully exploited, could enable credential theft, privilege escalation, and arbitrary code execution on the host. A brief description of the high-severity vulnerabilities is as follows - GHSA-hjr6-g723-hmfm (CVSS score: 8.8) - An operating system
The China-linked cybercrime group known as Silver Fox has been attributed to a new Rust-based remote access trojan (RAR) called MODBEACON. Chinese cybersecurity company QiAnXin said that while the threat cluster may appear like a low-sophistication, high-activity operation that propagates malware via counterfeit installers using SEO poisoning techniques, it belies their true organizational
In 2021, we shipped Smart Tiered Cache . The idea: for each origin behind your site, Cloudflare picks the single best upper-tier data center to route through, based on real-time latency. Flip one switch, and we find the fastest path from our network to your origin. That works as long as an origin IP lives in one fixed place. Public cloud origins usually don't. They sit behind anycast or regional unicast front ends, so one origin IP can look equally close to a dozen Cloudflare data centers at once — and the latency probes have nothing to lock onto. Smart Tiered Cache handles this the safe way: when there's no clear winner, it falls back to several upper tiers. Nothing breaks. You just lose the thing that made a single closest tier worth it, which is cache efficiency. Smart Tiered Cache for Public Cloud Regions fixes this by letting you provide a cloud region hint. With that hint, Cloudflare can map public cloud origins to the right region and select better primary and fallback upper tiers, even when the origin IP itself looks anycast or ambiguous. We made our most popular tiered cache topology smarter Since it was launched, Smart Tiered Cache has become the most popular tiered cache topology among Cloudflare customers. It’s available to all plans, for free. Much of our work aims to continually improve it. Over time, we’ve extended Smart Tiered Cache to handle more origin architectures, including: November 2024 : Smart Tiered Cache for R2 : We taught Smart Tiered Cache to automatically select the closest upper tier to where the R2 bucket actually lives, reducing latency with zero configuration.
There are several major managed detection and response (MDR) companies to choose from. We’ve compared the main offerings of the best MDR providers to help you decide which is right for your organisation. Maybe it was a near miss, or a security team stretched too thin and drowning in alerts from dozens of tools. Whatever […] The post Top 6 Managed Detection and Response Providers appeared first on Heimdal Security Blog .
Most enterprises assume their asset inventory is close enough to accurate. The evidence suggests otherwise. According to a survey of over 600 security leaders in the 2026 Axonius Actionability Report, only 45% of organizations consolidate their asset and exposure data into a single view, and every downstream security program inherits whatever the inventory gets wrong. Lumen Technologies, a
I reverse-engineered the DJI Spark smart battery I2C/SMBus protocol and documented the captures, firmware, and hardware
Researchers ran 281 of the most popular free VPN apps on the Google Play Store through a new testing system and found that many fail at the basics people install a VPN for, i.e., keeping their traffic private and secure. The apps flagged with at least one problem have been installed more than 2.4 billion times. The problems are basic, not sophisticated. 29 apps let user traffic leak outside
A threat actor has been targeting organizations spanning multiple sectors with voice-based fake security requests that prompt Microsoft 365 users to enroll a new Entra passkey with an aim to carry out data extortion attacks. The threat actor, tracked by Okta under the moniker O-UNC-066, has deployed a panel-controlled phishing kit that's capable of targeting the passkey enrollment process. The
Security testing identifies vulnerabilities, weaknesses, and misconfigurations before attackers can exploit them. This guide covers every major method, when to use each, and how to build a program that finds what actually matters. The post What Is Security Testing? A Practitioner’s Guide to Methods, Tools, and When to Use Each appeared first on Synack .
Overview PayRange is a mobile payment app that allows users to pay for vending machines, laundromats, and other unattended machines using a smartphone with Bluetooth. Two vulnerabilities were discovered in version 7.0.7 of the PayRange app that is available in the Google Play store. Description A vulnerability (CVE-2026-13462) exists in the PayRange Android app that causes invalid SSL certificates to be accepted in application WebViews. A second vulnerability (CVE-2026-13461) exists that allows the injection of JavaScript, which can be used to escape the WebView sandbox and perform a number of dangerous actions on the user's device. These vulnerabilities were discovered in version 7.0.7 of the PayRange app. The PayRange app bypasses Android's SSL trust chain and accepts certificates that match any of the following rules (including self-signed certificates): Common Name ends with "payrange.com" Common Name contains "stripe.com" Common Name contains "fetlifestatus.com" AND any of these conditions are true: Issuer Common Name is "R10" Issuer Common Name is "R3" Issuer Common Name contains "Network Solutions" The attack vector is an on-path interception. If an attacker can direct traffic intended for a legitimate server to a device they control, they can negotiate a TLS connection with the user's device using any trusted certificate that matches the rule set. They are then able to inject content into the WebView and harvest credentials, issue malicious requests and read data entered by the user, including exchanges with the PayRange and Stripe servers. Impact An attacker may be able to intercept any information they can convince the
Hi everyone, I've recently released **Auditor 1.0.0**, a command-line utility for file hashing and integrity verification, and I'd like to share some of the new features that may be useful for digital forensics workflows. # New: Verified file copy Two new commands have been added to perform file copies while ensuring end-to-end integrity. **clone** * Reads each source file and computes its hash. * Copies the file to the destination. * Reads the copied file, recomputes its hash, and verifies it against the source. * Can also generate audit/hash files if they don't already exist. **chkcopy** Similar to `clone`, but additionally validates the source against previously generated audit files before copying: * Verifies that the audit files exist. * Recomputes the source hash and compares it with the recorded value. * Copies the file. * Verifies the copied file by hashing it again and comparing it with the source. Both commands support configurable retry logic (number of attempts and delay between retries), which is particularly useful when copying over network shares where transient I/O or connection failures may occur. # Compatibility with existing checksum tools Auditor can now verify checksum files generated by other utilities, including: * `fsum` * `sha256sum` * `b3sum` * and others This makes it easier to integrate Auditor into existing workflows without requiring proprietary hash lists. # Multiple hash encodings Besides the traditional hexadecimal (Base16) representation, Auditor now supports: * Base32 * Base64 * Base85 This is handy when working with systems that exchange hashes in different encodings (for example, some forensic monitoring systems that use Base32). # Windows, Linux and macOS Precompiled binaries are available for Windows, Linux and macOS. The Linux build has also been updated to run cleanly under **WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux)**, which may be useful for investigators who automate their workflow with Linux shell scripts while working on Windows. Documentation and downloads: [https://thash.org/auditor](https://thash.org/auditor) # Breaking change in v1.0.0 The default behavior has changed. Previous versions enabled the **thash** method by default. Starting with **v1.0.0**, Auditor computes standard hashes by default, producing exactly the same values as tools such as `sha256sum`, `b3sum`, and `fsum`. The **thash** algorithm is still available, but it must now be explicitly enabled with: `-t` or `--thash` This change was made to improve interoperability while keeping thash available for situations where faster integrity verification of very large datasets is desirable. Feedback, bug reports and feature suggestions are always welcome.
RSA and ECC, cryptographic algorithms that we’ve all relied on for decades, are vulnerable to the attack of sufficiently advanced quantum computers. Such quantum computers do not exist yet, but they seem to be coming sooner than expected. Luckily, the solution is already available: migrate to ML-KEM encryption and ML-DSA signatures, which are designed to be resistant to quantum attack. They were standardized in 2024 by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) after an eight-year open international competition. The migration to post-quantum cryptography is in full swing now. At the time of writing, the majority of traffic handled by Cloudflare is already using ML-KEM encryption, and is thus secured against the threat to data posed by harvest-now-decrypt-later attacks. But encryption is only one part of the equation: to be fully secure against quantum computers capable of breaking classical cryptography, we aim to deploy post-quantum signatures to protect authentication systems from unauthorized access. We are targeting 2029 for Cloudflare to be fully post-quantum secure. ML-DSA, the best all-around post-quantum signature scheme standardized today, has its downsides: it’s much larger on the wire, and many tricks we were able to perform with RSA and ECC simply cannot be done with ML-DSA. There are better post-quantum signature schemes on the horizon: last month, NIST announced that it is advancing nine
A Majority of European Lawmakers Voted Against Letting Big Tech Read Our Messages. They’re Going to Anyway
Companies will once again be allowed to scan citizens’ personal texts, emails, and social media messages via the “Chat Control” bill to find child abuse material online.
Overview Two vulnerabilities have been discovered in Xerte Online Toolkits, an open-source e-learning authoring toolsuite intended for the creation of learning materials within a web browser. CVE-2026-14261 tracks the persistence of the /setup/ directory after installation, which allows an unauthenticated attacker to reconfigure the application to point to a remote database they control in order to gain administrative access. CVE-2026-12116 tracks an editable antivirus binary path that can be redirected to a PHP interpreter, causing uploaded files to be executed as PHP code and resulting in remote code execution (RCE). Version v3.15.5 or v3.14.6 of Xerte Online Toolkits fixes these vulnerabilities. Description Xerte Online Toolkits is a suite of a free, open-source e-learning authoring tools that allows users to make educational materials directly in-browser. The toolset is installed from multiple packages, and creates a setup folder that persists after installation. CVE-2026-14261 A vulnerability in Xerte Online Toolkits allows for authentication bypass and remote code execution via reinstallation through the /setup/ folder, enabling attackers to reinstall the service to a remote database they control. CVE-2026-12116 A vulnerability in Xerte Online Toolkits allows for RCE through the antivirus binary path in the tools server settings. The antivirus binary runs on all uploaded files, but the path to the binary can be modified using the configuration menu. An attacker can achieve remote code execution by redirecting the path to a PHP interpreter, causing any uploaded PHP scripts to be executed. During installation, Xerte creates a /setup/
An MSG database tracked and categorized hundreds of celebs, famous Knicks superfans, and even some of Taylor Swift’s wedding guests. Labels included “LGBTQIA,” “DO NOT HOST,” and low to high “risk.”
A malicious commit disguised as SDK telemetry briefly compromised @injectivelabs/sdk-ts, exfiltrating wallet mnemonics and private keys.
Our 2026 State of Vulnerabilities Report surfaces what Synack finds in tested customer environments. At a recent webinar, two of our most decorated researchers from the Synack Red Team describe the threat landscape they’re seeing beyond the report findings. Here's what the data shows, what practitioners have experienced, and what your security program should do about the gap. The post The 2026 State of Vulnerabilities: What the Data Misses, According to Our Red Team appeared first on Synack .
VU#849433: Adalo Database API Enables Cross-App User Data Extraction via Over-Fetching and Missing Authorization Controls
Overview Adalo’s no‑code application platform exposes complete user records through its database API for all applications built on both V1 and V2. Due to a platform-level flaw, authenticated users can retrieve full user data belonging to any Adalo application, regardless of configuration. This issue affects more than one million applications and placing developers and their end users at risk of data exposure that they cannot prevent or remediate. Description Adalo is a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) provider for building no-code applications. In theory, each application or tenant (customer) is logically isolated with separate databases, users, and configurations. CVE-2026-10706 Unrestricted Disclosure of Full User Records The Adalo database API contains a flaw which allows the backend to return complete user records for every list component request, regardless of which fields the component is configured to display. The database does not enforce ownership‑aware, server‑side authorization checks, allowing authenticated users of any Adalo application to query database and table identifiers belonging to other applications and retrieve full records, including fields not requested. This issue is amplified by the permissive CORS policy, plaintext storage of all text files and evidence suggests that deleted records may remain accessible. CVE-2026-10708 Exposure and Reuse of Long-Lived JWT Tokens The JWT tokens are visible in client‑side requests and remain valid for approximately twenty days. Once copied, they can be reused from any external website or script to query the database API directly. Because the platform allows requests from any origin, attackers can repeatedly query the API and extract large volumes of user data without interacting with the applica
Presently sponsored by: Report URI: Guarding you from rogue JavaScript! Don’t get pwned; get real-time alerts & prevent breaches #SecureYourSite How's this for a location?! I mean, last week was nice with Scott in Mallorca, but Marrakech is, well, wow Anyway, about those data breaches... This week I'm talking about the futility of attempting to remove piss from a pool , yet here we are, with various companies wanting to place that message alongside the very data breaches they can do nothing about! As I say in the post, I don't question the good intentions behind setting up a service to try to scrub data from legally operating data brokers, but the marketing machines behind those organisations that regularly reach out to me for product placement don't really seem to grasp that reality. At least now they have a nice explainer courtesy of that post
Many internal services at Cloudflare need to read and modify the same control-plane state from across our 330+ global data centers. They need guarantees that different readers never see inconsistent state, and that the system remains available for writes even when some data centers or links fail. But Cloudflare’s network runs across the entire Internet, and the Internet is an unpredictable place. Servers and data centers go down. Queues fill up. Links and cables get cut. These conditions make it difficult to run a globally available data system that guarantees strong consistency (e.g., that all readers are guaranteed to read all prior writes) because hostile conditions hinder distributed system replicas’ ability to reliably synchronize data with one another. One way to synchronize data safely despite adverse network conditions is via a consensus algorithm, which allows a set of machines to agree on the same sequence of values, such as key-value store put and get operations, as long as a majority remains alive and able to communicate. Unfortunately, commonly deployed consensus algorithms like Raft suffer in wide-area networks like Cloudflare’s because they rely on leaders and timeouts . The leader is the only replica allowed to make writes, and if it fails due to a crash or network degradation, the system becomes unavailable until some other replica times out and a new leader is elected. And these timeout values are hard to configure in networks with unpredictable latencies. We have experienced multiple incidents caused by unavailable leaders in consensus-driven systems. And so, for the past year, Cloudflare’s Research team has been building a new distributed consensus service called Meerkat powered by a consensus algorithm called
A cybersecurity startup dangling millions of dollars to acquire zero-day security vulnerabilities in popular software is run by a pair of far-right conspiracy theorists and convicted felons whose most recent ventures included fake intelligence companies and a now-defunct AI-based lobbying platform they operated under assumed names. The X/Twitter account IRIS C2 (@C2IRIS) has gained more than 4,000 followers since its creation in January 2025, posting frequently about security vulnerabilities, AI and software exploits. IRIS C2 says it is a company in McLean, Va. that sells offensive cybersecurity capabilities. The IRIS C2 website dangles the possibility of million-dollar payouts for exploits to attract talent. “Our business model is this,” reads a pinned post on top of the IRIS C2 account on X. “Attract the very best vulnerability researchers and exploit developers in the world to join our company. This mostly revolves around junior engineers with raw talent/extremely high IQ. We don’t care if they have a college degree/industry experience.” The website linked in that profile — irisc2[.]com — says the company is hiring for a number of open positions, and a recent post on its LinkedIn page enthuses about an overwhelming number of appli
In April we released Mewt , our open-source mutation-testing engine that finds the gaps in your test suite. Today we’re expanding it with support for DAML, the language Canton Network applications are written in. Mewt now reads DAML, generates several classes of mutants (including two built for DAML’s authorization primitives), and runs them through your existing test suite to count how many mutants survive. If you want to try it, simply install Mewt from the repository , point a mewt.toml at your project and its test command, and use mewt run . For a team shipping DAML to production, that count is what a passing test run is actually worth: it puts a number on how much your suite checks, whereas a green run on its own does not. Why DAML’s coverage reports lie Test coverage is the most reassuring lie in smart-contract development. Hitting 100% line coverage tells you the test runner walked the code; it does not tell you whether any test would fail if that code stopped doing what it is supposed to. We have been grading test harnesses by how many mutants they kill since at least 2019 , and our primer on finding the bugs your tests don’t catch shows how a green suite can still miss the bug that matters. DAML’s built-in coverage measures execution at the template and choice level: which templates were created and which choices were exercised over the test run. It reports whether each ch
Scammers are hijacking government websites to upload ads for “leaked” OnlyFans content. Thousands of copyright complaints from adult creators are helping people avoid malicious links.
Burst water mains. Evacuated hospitals. In a closed-door simulation, insurers played out their response to a mass disruption by China’s Volt Typhoon hackers—and found a nightmare scenario.
Your client is no longer just buying your security advice. They’re auditing whether you live by it. That was a clear message from my exclusive interview with Heather MacDonald Alford, an MSP finance specialist and owner of Counting Creators. Heather’s exactly the kind of customer MSPs should be paying attention to. She’s informed, commercially minded, and willing to challenge vendors to […] The post Cyber-Aware Customers Are Raising the Bar for MSPs and Other Vendors appeared first on Heimdal Security Blog .
Datadog Security Research has tracked multiple coordinated campaigns enumerating GitHub organizations, repositories, and users through the public GitHub API, abusing leaked access tokens, and cloning private repositories.
GitLost: a public GitHub issue can steer an org's Agentic Workflow into leaking private repo contents, and a one-word prefix ("Additionally") bypassed the threat-detection guardrail
Noma Security published a technique they call GitLost against GitHub Agentic Workflows (the plain-English-Markdown agent feature GitHub put into public preview in February, runnable on Copilot, Claude, Gemini, or Codex). Worth reading because it is a clean demonstration of why "filter the injection" does not hold as a defense. The setup. Workflows are read-only by default, but an org can hand one a personal access token with read access across its repos, private ones included, to give the agent cross-repo context. That grant is the whole vulnerability. Nothing else about the attack requires access: no stolen creds, no write access to anything private, no touching a server. The attacker just opens a normal-looking issue on a public repo. The technique is indirect prompt injection, which is not new, but the interesting part is what the agent controls. Noma's Sasi Levi frames the distinction as earlier injection being about manipulating what an agent says, versus GitLost being about what an agent does with its permissions. The agent here is a credentialed actor sitting in CI/CD-adjacent infrastructure with read scope over repos the attacker cannot see. In their PoC the malicious issue was dressed as a routine request from a "VP of Sales" after a customer meeting. A normal automation assigned the issue, the agent read it, pulled a private repo's README, and pasted it into a public comment. That public comment is the exfiltration channel. The guardrail bypass is the part netsec will care about. GitHub built defenses for exactly this class: sandboxing, read-only tokens by default, input cleaning, and a threat-detection step that scans the agent's proposed output before it posts. GitHub's own architecture docs are explicit that they design assuming the agent is already compromised (dedicated container, egress firewall, an MCP gateway container that holds the PAT so the agent process never touches it). Noma reported that prefixing the malicious instruction with a single word, "Additionally," got the model to treat it as a follow-on task rather than something to refuse, and the output scanner let it through. This maps cleanly onto Simon Willison's "lethal trifecta": an agent that (1) can reach private data, (2) ingests untrusted external content, and (3) has a way to send data out. All three present means a leak path, and Levi is explicit that this is structural, not a patch target. In natural language there is no clean data/instruction boundary the way there is in parameterized SQL, so the mitigation is architectural (isolation, scoped credentials, staged human review) rather than pattern-matching the payload away. Not an isolated finding either, this is a whole class: \- Anthropic's Claude Code GitHub Action: a single malicious issue pushed the agent into leaking secrets and seizing write access (Aikido). \- Orca's RoguePilot: a hidden prompt in an issue made Copilot leak a repo's privileged token. \- Invariant Labs (May 2025): a public issue drove a GitHub MCP-connected agent into reading a private repo and leaking it via PR. They called it architectural then too. \- "Comment and Control": cross-vendor study that got Claude Code, Gemini CLI, and Copilot to leak their own API keys through issue/PR text. Mitigations that actually reduce scope (from Noma): \- Scope the integration PAT to the single repo the workflow triages, not org-wide read. This is the biggest lever. A token that sees one repo is far less dangerous than one with broad org read granted for convenience. \- Limit what a public-facing workflow can post, since the comment is the exfil channel (safe outputs). \- Restrict which authors' content the agent will act on. \- Gate outputs behind human review. The threat-detection scan is a backstop, not a boundary, as the one-word bypass shows.
Today, the UK government launched the Cyber Resilience Pledge : a voluntary framework inviting organizations to commit to foundational cybersecurity governance, board-level accountability, and comprehensive cybersecurity coverage across supply chains. Cloudflare is proud to join the pledge’s founding cohort of signatories and continue our long-standing work with the Department of Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT), National Cyber Security Centre, and others to shape a more secure, future-ready digital economy for the UK . The pledge's core pillars — democratizing security, leadership accountability, and radical transparency — have been at the heart of Cloudflare since day one. Instead of approaching this framework as a new set of commitments to meet, we see it as a welcome validation from the UK government of the security philosophy and principles Cloudflare has championed for over a decade. We are glad to see the rest of the industry moving in this direction. This pledge is an important step, and it comes at a time of significant cyber risk. In the first quarter of 2026, Cloudflare's global network blocked an average of 234 billion cyber threats every day . Recently, we mitigated a hyper-volumetric DDoS attack that peaked at 31.4 Tbps . At th
Continuing our journey through Sentinel ingestion cost reduction, this part focuses on one of the most expensive log sources: firewalls, and more specifically, network traffic events. Network traffic logs from firewalls are highly voluminous and often become the largest contributor to data ingestion costs. At the same time, they remain a valuable source of information during Incident Response or while developing Threat Detection use cases, as they provide a centralized view of network activity across the environment. T
Overview In the first installment of this series , I walked through how I leveraged large language models to assist in identifying several vulnerabilities in the FreeBSD kernel, including a stack-based buffer overflow assigned CVE-2026-3038 . This raised a natural follow-up question. Can language models effectively write exploits for memory corruption vulnerabilities? This article explores that question. I’ll detail two exploit chains I developed that achieve a full escape from a FreeBSD jail environment. The first chain pairs a stack-based buffer overflow with a stack-based information leak to defeat both stack canaries and KASLR. The second takes a different path, combining a heap-based buf
Overview Several versions of Tenda firmware contain an undocumented authentication backdoor that grants administrative access to the devices' web management interfaces. An attacker can expoit this vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2026-11405, to bypass the password verification process and obtain full administrative control without valid credentials. Affected Versions: * US_FH1201V1.0BR_V1.2.0.14(408)_EN_TD * US_W15EV1.0br_V15.11.0.5(1068_1567_841)_EN_TDE * US_AC10V1.0re_V15.03.06.46_multi_TDE01 * US_AC5V1.0RTL_V15.03.06.48_multi_TDE01 * US_AC6V2.0RTL_V15.03.06.51_multi_T Description Tenda is a supplier of home and business network devices such as routers, switches, wireless access points, and video surveillance equipment. Most of these devices include web-based interfaces that allow users to perform configuration and management operations, which are protected by username/password authentication to prevent unauthorized modifications. The web server binary /bin/httpd contains an undocumented backdoor authentication mechanism in the login() function. Initially, the function follows a normal authentication path using MD5-based password verification. However, if authentication fails, the function invokes GetValue("sys.rzadmin.password") to retrieve an alternate password value from the device configuration. It then performs a direct strcmp() comparison in plaintext between the user-supplied password and the configuration-stored value. A successful match grants role=2 admin-level access and creates a valid session. The associated username is not validated, so any provided username will succeed when paired with the backdoor password. This backdo