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Cybersecurity News Digest — Daily Briefings

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High-severity Amazon Q MCP flaw enables cloud theft

🛡️ A high-severity flaw in Amazon Q Developer allowed a malicious repository to spawn MCP servers and execute commands, exposing a developer's cloud credentials. Wiz Research discovered the issue and demonstrated that a single config file (.amazonq/mcp.json) in a cloned repo could trigger AWS credential theft. Amazon patched the vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2026-12957 (CVSS 8.5), and updated Language Servers for AWS and IDE plugins to require explicit consent for untrusted MCP servers.
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Linux pedit COW exploit lets local users gain root

⚠️ A critical memory-corruption bug in the Linux traffic-control subsystem (CVE-2026-46331, “pedit COW”) enables a local unprivileged user to gain root by corrupting shared page-cache memory. The flaw allows modification of a cached setuid binary image in memory without touching the on-disk file; a public exploit appeared within a day of CVE assignment. The exploit requires the act_pedit module be loadable and unprivileged user namespaces enabled; affected vendors have issued patches and mitigations.
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AI Adoption Is Accelerating Risks for SMEs

🔒 Small and mid-sized businesses are rapidly adopting AI, often ahead of large enterprises, and this pace is outstripping their ability to govern associated cyber risks. Shadow AI—employees using public tools without oversight—exposes customer data, financial records, and intellectual property, while attackers increasingly exploit these weaker links in supply chains. The author urges owners and CFOs to map AI use, restrict sensitive data, treat AI access like hires, and engage advisors who can secure AI adoption effectively.
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Shai Hulud CI/CD to Redshift breach analysis

🔍 This FortiGuard Labs analysis examines the Shai Hulud supply chain worm that poisoned CI/CD dependencies to harvest Jenkins credentials and pivot into AWS. The report outlines a mid‑May 2026 incident where FortiCNAPP traced external use of a Jenkins instance role, IAM escalation to a cloudops-monitor identity, and subsequent Redshift data extraction. It highlights detection signals, MITRE mappings, and recommended containment actions.
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CISA Adds PTC Windchill RCE to KEV Catalog

🔒 The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has added a critical RCE vulnerability affecting PTC Windchill PDMlink and PTC FlexPLM to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog after evidence of active exploitation. The flaw, tracked as CVE-2026-12569 with a CVSS score of 9.3, allows arbitrary code execution via improper input validation and deserialization of untrusted data. Patches were released last week, but PTC warns of ongoing attacks deploying JSP web shells and published IoCs and mitigations.
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DirtyClone Linux kernel flaw enables local root

🛡️ JFrog Security Research published a working exploit for DirtyClone (CVE-2026-43503) on June 25, demonstrating a local privilege escalation in the DirtyFrag family. The flaw lets a local user corrupt file-backed memory via cloned network packets to gain root; the upstream patch landed in mainline on May 21. Exploitation requires CAP_NET_ADMIN to configure an IPsec tunnel, and unprivileged user namespaces on Debian and Fedora enable the default attack path. Ubuntu 24.04+ mitigates the default vector via AppArmor restrictions.
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Guardian Agents: The Next Layer of Identity

🛡️ This guide examines how agentic AI shifted enterprise identity risks and why existing IAM controls fall short. It explains how AI agents inherit human permissions, traverse systems at machine speed, and create an expanding population of autonomous identities often deployed without security review. The piece outlines the guardian agent concept: a purpose-built runtime control layer that inventories agents, baselines behavior, detects anomalies, and enforces least-privilege at execution time to close the governance gap.
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One Million Passports Exposed in Data Leak

🔐 A database containing nearly one million passport records from multiple countries was leaked online. The incident highlights how high-value credentials like passports can be compromised when reused within lower-security systems; in this case, an ID verification service used by cannabis dispensaries was breached. The exposure demonstrates the cascading risk when sensitive identity documents are trusted by ancillary services with weaker protections.
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Widespread GitHub Actions Misconfigs Threaten CI/CD

🔍 Kaspersky researchers analyzed GitHub Actions across ~30,000 popular repositories and scanned ~130,000 pipelines using new rules in Kaspersky Container Security. Only 10% of repositories showed no concerns; the scan flagged over 250,000 potential deviations from secure CI/CD recommendations, with 0.4% classified as high risk and eight repositories containing critical flaws that could enable supply chain compromise. The study highlights common errors like exposed secrets, insecure run conditions, and unsafe handling of external data, and the ruleset is now available to KCS users.
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Practical Zero Trust Plan for OT: 90‑Day Roadmap

🔒 The article reframes zero trust for operational technology (OT) by focusing on practical, non‑disruptive steps that align with regulatory requirements and operational realities. It proposes a 90‑day plan: Days 1–30 prioritize mapping assets and identities at IT/OT boundaries; Days 31–60 contain vendor remote access to gain early wins; Days 61–90 build a simple maturity scorecard and narrative. The approach emphasizes targeted controls, governance alignment, and measurable progress rather than abstract architectures.
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Bill would require mandatory AI incident reporting

📝 A proposed AI Incident Reporting Act would obligate developers of designated high-capability models to report major safety and security incidents to the Commerce Department. Reports would be required within seven days of discovery, with 48-hour notifications to congressional leaders for imminent or ongoing serious harm. The bill tasks the Secretary of Commerce with defining capability thresholds and grants the department investigative and enforcement powers, including fines up to $2 million per violation.
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Mythos and Frontier AI: Practical Implications for CISOs

🔎 The article argues that frontier AI models like Mythos are a signal of shifting cyber economics rather than an immediate, novel threat. It emphasizes that longstanding security fundamentals—asset visibility, patching, identity controls and resilient operations—remain the primary defenses. The author advocates using AI to accelerate analysis, prioritize remediation and close persistent control gaps rather than replacing skilled practitioners or prompting reactive, headline-driven spending.
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CMC analysis of Canvas incident impacts education

🔍 The UK Cyber Monitoring Centre (CMC) has published its review of the Canvas incident affecting Instructure’s Learning Management System, finding ~160 UK higher education institutions impacted and around 9,000 worldwide. The analysis highlights that financial losses arose mainly from response, recovery and risk management rather than prolonged outage. The CMC reinforced best-practice recommendations for the sector, including MFA enforcement, separation of application and data layers, careful third‑party control and clearer vendor communication.
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Ten years of the GDPR: mixed outcomes and lessons

📄 Ten years after the GDPR came into force, data protection is far more established across Europe and beyond, raising consumer awareness and making privacy a competitive factor for businesses. Record fines against major tech firms underline enforcement seriousness, even as many penalties remain disputed. Companies increasingly view the regulation as burdensome and legally uncertain, complicating innovation, notably in AI development.
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Anthropic tests Claude Cowork mobile control features

🖥️ Anthropic appears to be testing mobile support for Claude Cowork, enabling users to start and monitor long-running Claude tasks from their phones. Cowork, a desktop-focused agentic mode that performs extended knowledge-work tasks, can access files, generate documents and continue working in the background. Screenshots shared on X indicate the mobile experience will act as a remote control while the heavy processing remains on the user’s PC. Anthropic has not officially announced full mobile rollout yet.
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Poland Busts SIM-Swapping Gang Linked to Crypto Theft

🔎 Polish authorities arrested four suspects accused of orchestrating SIM-swapping attacks after breaching telecommunications partners and hijacking email accounts. The operation, led by the Polish Cybercrime Bureau (CBZC) with assistance from the FBI and HSI, uncovered sophisticated intrusions used to intercept SMS and email communications and seize crypto exchange accounts. Investigators estimate the group laundered millions via distributed financial networks and multiple bank accounts. The suspects face charges including organized crime, hacking, and money laundering, with potential sentences up to 25 years.
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Amazon EC2 C7a instances arrive in Singapore

🚀Starting today, compute-optimized Amazon EC2 C7a instances are available in the AWS Asia Pacific (Singapore) Region. Powered by 4th Gen AMD EPYC (Genoa) processors with up to 3.7 GHz, C7a delivers up to 50% higher performance than C6a and adds new capabilities like AVX-512, VNNI, and bfloat16. These instances use DDR5 memory for 2.25x more memory bandwidth, come in 12 sizes including bare-metal, and support up to 128 EBS attachments. C7a instances run on the AWS Nitro System and are available via On-Demand, Spot, and Savings Plans.
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Amazon EC2 M8a instances now in Mumbai region

🚀 Starting today, Amazon EC2 M8a general-purpose instances are available in the AWS Asia Pacific (Mumbai) region. Powered by 5th Gen AMD EPYC CPUs with up to 4.5 GHz, M8a offers up to 30% higher performance and up to 19% better price-performance than M7a. Instances provide 45% more memory bandwidth, SAP certification, 12 sizes including 2 bare metal, and are suitable for high-throughput workloads.
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