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Cybersecurity News Digest — Daily Briefings

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UCO and Google accelerate forensic case analysis with AI

🧭 This collaboration between Google Public Sector and the University of Central Oklahoma (UCO) Forensic Science Institute uses Google’s NotebookLM to rapidly analyze complex criminal case documents and construct timelines. Originating from an AI hackathon co-led by UCO’s CIO Sonya Watkins, the project leverages Gemini to prioritize high-impact prototypes and has reduced multi-month analyses to days in early trials. UCO instructors ensure AI outputs are forensically sound and reliably cited.
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Critical Gogs zero-day enables remote code execution

🛡️ An unpatched zero-day in the Gogs self-hosted Git service allows authenticated non-admin users to gain remote code execution on Internet-facing instances. The flaw, an argument injection in the Merge() code path affecting Gogs 0.14.2 and 0.15.0+dev, can be exploited via malicious branch names during a rebase-merge operation. Researcher Jonah Burges reported the issue in March; maintainers have acknowledged but not yet patched it. Shadowserver and Shodan count thousands of exposed Gogs servers, many with default open registration enabled.
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Microsoft Rebukes Public Zero‑Day Disclosures

🛡️ Microsoft has urged the security research community to follow Coordinated Vulnerability Disclosure (CVD) after a researcher publicly released details and exploit code for multiple Windows zero‑days, including issues in Defender and BitLocker. The company said several disclosed flaws were not shared with Microsoft before publication, exposing customers to unnecessary risk and prompting security teams to work continuously on protections and updates. Some of the disclosed flaws — BlueHammer, RedSun and UnDefend — are reported to be actively exploited in the wild, and vendor actions have included takedowns of the researcher’s GitHub account.
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MyPillow and Play gang dispute over alleged breach

🛏️ The Play ransomware group claims to have stolen confidential MyPillow data and threatened a public dump, while CEO Mike Lindell denies any breach and calls the allegations politically motivated. Lindell says MyPillow stores no sensitive data internally and has received no ransom demands, attributing data handling to third parties. The Play group's leak portal set a deadline for release, leaving the truth pending until the deadline passes. The article warns that third-party handling of data still exposes organisations and individuals to meaningful risk.
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ThreatsDay bulletin: emerging cloud, supply chain risks

📰 This ThreatsDay roundup highlights widespread C2 infrastructure, supply-chain trojanization, exploitation trends, and emerging AI security features. It covers a large regional C2 footprint in the Middle East, an AKS privilege escalation fix, a DAEMON Tools supply-chain compromise added to CISA's KEV, and Apple’s PQC code disclosures. The bulletin also details law firm targeting by SRG, fake installers spreading a Deno RAT, PureLogs phishing, and a spike in DACH cyberattacks.
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CERT-In urges tighter remediation timelines amid AI risks

🔒 India’s cybersecurity agency, CERT-In, has issued a framework urging organizations to patch, mitigate, or isolate known exploited internet-facing “crown jewel” systems within 12 hours where feasible, citing AI-assisted attacks that compress exploitation timelines. The 38-page blueprint prescribes tiered remediation windows—one day for externally exposed critical flaws, three days for critical internal issues, and five days for high-severity vulnerabilities—while emphasizing temporary mitigations and continuous exposure management over periodic assessments.
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Romanian sentenced for hacking Oregon government network

🔒 A Romanian national was sentenced to 56 months in federal prison after pleading guilty to aggravated identity theft and unauthorized access to an Oregon state government computer network. The 46-year-old, known online as "inthematrixl," also sold access and stolen personal data from other U.S. victims, causing at least $250,000 in losses. Authorities coordinated internationally to arrest and extradite him, and the court ordered forfeiture of cryptocurrency and supervised release.
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Microsoft criticizes uncoordinated zero-day disclosures

🛡️ Microsoft has criticized researchers for publicly disclosing six zero-day vulnerabilities before patches were available, calling such actions irresponsible and risky. The company said its security teams are working around the clock to investigate and mitigate issues including privilege escalation and bypass flaws in Defender and BitLocker. Microsoft urged adherence to industry-standard coordinated vulnerability disclosure (CVD) practices, typically allowing a 90-day embargo for patch development. It cautioned that uncoordinated releases can place proof-of-concept exploit code into malicious hands and undermines efforts to protect customers.
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LayerX Report Reveals Concentrated Enterprise AI Risk

🔍 The LayerX Security State of AI Usage Report 2026 finds enterprise AI risk is concentrated among a small set of power users and a few dominant platforms, while usage fragments across personal accounts, browser extensions, embedded copilots, and connectors. The study shows ChatGPT still dominates conversations, Copilot M365 is growing, and consumer AI like Gemini is often used via personal accounts. Shadow AI now spans a long tail of under-the-radar tools and extensions that evade corporate visibility and governance.
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MacOS Supply-Chain Attacks Target Crypto Developers

🔍 Wiz has attributed a cluster named Jinx-0164 to a campaign targeting cryptocurrency firms with custom macOS malware, recruiter-themed lures and supply-chain tampering. The actor relies on LinkedIn-based social engineering and lookalike meeting domains to deliver a Python stealer/remote access tool called Audiofix, which poses as an audio driver and harvests keys, credentials and wallet data. They also abuse stolen GitHub tokens to inject backdoors into CI/CD repositories, causing builds to propagate the malware across development environments.
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Carnival Cruise Confirms Breach Impacting Millions

🛳️ Carnival Corporation confirmed a data breach affecting nearly 6 million customers after attackers used social engineering to access an employee account on April 10, 2026. The company began notifying 5,995,277 individuals and engaged third-party security experts while blocking the unauthorized activity. Analysis of leaked data indicates exposed names, dates of birth, emails, genders, locations, and loyalty program details tied to Holland America’s Mariner Society.
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AI agent governance: observability is essential

🛡️ CIOs rushing to deploy AI agents without visibility risk major failures; experts warn that observability and governance are required. Many organizations treat agents like RPA and set-and-forget systems, but agents operate in model runtimes and need end-to-end tracing, least-privilege permissions, and human-in-the-loop checks. Vendors and cloud providers offer tools, yet governance can become a bottleneck if it’s not scalable and actionable.
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Incident-hardened CISOs earn greater trust

🔍 ISC2 research of 796 cybersecurity professionals shows that leaders who've managed real, high-profile incidents gain greater credibility. Over three quarters agreed such experience boosts trust, with 35% strongly agreeing. The survey finds outcome or blame of the prior incident is less relevant than the experience itself. Respondents emphasised a blend of technical and strategic skills, plus clear communication and team development.
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Attack Surface and Cyber Risks for FIFA 2026

📘 The 2026 FIFA World Cup spans 39 days across 16 host cities in three nations, creating a vast temporary tournament network layered on existing stadium and municipal infrastructure. This assessment warns of high likelihoods for disruptive intrusions, large-scale fraud and politically motivated DDoS and hack-and-leak operations. Key drivers include Iran-nexus disruptive campaigns, pro-Russian hacktivist DDoS activity and financially motivated cybercrime targeting fans and the hospitality ecosystem.
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DICOM Heap Overflows: Orthanc, pydicom, GDCM Risks

🔍 This white paper examines DICOM parsing risks and demonstrates how malformed medical images can lead to heap overflow vulnerabilities during ingestion. It outlines a concrete case where an Orthanc server is targeted during image upload, producing an out-of-bounds write. The analysis highlights interactions between pydicom, GDCM, and Orthanc, and emphasizes the importance of robust parsing and hardening in PACS environments.
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GCHQ warns businesses: urgent cyber action on AI

⚠️ Anne Keast-Butler, director of GCHQ, urged UK businesses to treat cybersecurity as national defence during the agency's first annual lecture at Bletchley Park on May 27. She warned that rapid AI development narrows the window to stay ahead of threats and called on boardrooms to act now. GCHQ plans a machine-speed national cyber defence using agentic AI within five years while urging adoption of basic controls and quantum-resistant cryptography.
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Industrialized exploitation and defenders’ response

🔎 Adversarial AI has transformed targeted attacks into high-speed, automated campaigns that no longer require elite technical operators. Existing security architectures—fragmented, tool-heavy, and visibility-poor—fail to show defenders the chained attack paths attackers can exploit. The author argues for shifting from vulnerability counting to Exposure Management, prioritizing remediation by real exploitability and mapping environments as attacker-seen networks. Defenders retain an advantage if they synthesize cross-boundary telemetry and continuously assess validated attack paths to critical assets.
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FBI: Physical tech-support scams target law firms

🛡️ The FBI warns of a gang dubbed the Silent Ransom Group (SRG) that has shifted from phishing and remote access scams to in-person impersonation of IT support, gaining physical access to devices to install malware or exfiltrate data. The group, active since at least 2022, typically steals data to extort victims without using ransomware encryption. Indicators include unauthorized installs of remote-access tools, new USB or external drive activity, and unexpected data uploads to services like OneDrive or Google Drive.
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