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Every day the cybersecurity world moves fast β€” new incidents, evolving AI risks, changing regulations, and critical vendor updates. We cut through the noise to deliver only what matters most for your business and security strategy.

CISO Brief brings you a daily digest of high-signal news: major breaches, hyperscaler security releases, AI and compliance shifts, and the latest threat intelligence β€” all in one concise update.

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Cybersecurity News Digest β€” Daily Briefings

Latest News

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Implementing Egress Controls to Prevent Data Exfiltration

πŸ”’ This post outlines an architecture and controls for preventing data exfiltration from AWS environments by combining centralized network inspection, DNS filtering, and data perimeter policies. It explains a hub-and-spoke pattern using Transit Gateway, AWS Network Firewall, and Route 53 Resolver DNS Firewall to inspect and block unauthorized outbound traffic, including scenarios involving compromised workloads and agentic AI. The article details layered preventive, detective, and corrective measures using AWS services such as GuardDuty, Security Hub, IAM Access Analyzer, EventBridge, and Firewall Manager to automate detection and response.
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Squidbleed: 29-Year-Old Squid Proxy Heap Over-Read

πŸ”Ž A heap over-read in the Squid web proxy can leak cleartext HTTP requests, including credentials and session tokens, to any user already allowed to use the same proxy. Disclosed by researchers at Calif.io in June and tracked as CVE-2026-47729 (Squidbleed), the bug stems from a 1997 FTP-parsing change and affects Squid default configurations that enable FTP and port 21. The flaw only exposes traffic Squid can inspect (cleartext HTTP or TLS-terminating setups); normal CONNECT-tunneled HTTPS remains opaque. Calif.io demonstrated extracting an Authorization header from a co-proxy user; public proof-of-concept code exists and mitigations include patching or simply disabling FTP.
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Search-Your-Target Market for Stolen Credentials

πŸ”Ž Flare analyzed 470 underground forum posts from January 2025 to June 2026 revealing a growing service layer that lets buyers query massive infostealer-derived credential collections for specific companies, platforms, domains, geographies, or account types. These sellers act as brokers, offering search, deduplication, formatting, and targeted delivery of credentials from databases claiming billions of records. Buyer feedback highlights gaps in quality, freshness, and validity, while the market partially overlaps with Initial Access Brokers and amplifies account takeover risks.
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BootROM USB exploit risks A12, S4/S5 and A13 devices

πŸ”’ Paradigm Shift disclosed a BootROM vulnerability named usbliter8 that enables physical attackers to compromise the boot chain on Apple A12, S4/S5 and A13 SoCs. The flaw combines a hardware issue in the Synopsys DesignWare USB controller with a SecureROM firmware configuration error, creating a DMA underflow that can overwrite SecureROM SRAM. Exploitation requires DFU mode and specific microcontroller hardware, limiting remote abuse but posing risk to seized or unattended devices.
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Google enforces developer verification on Android

πŸ”’ Google will begin enforcing Android developer verification on September 30, 2026, in Brazil, Indonesia, Singapore, and Thailand. Certified devices from major OEMs will block normal installs of apps whose developers have not registered an identity with Google, affecting sideloaded and independent apps most. The Android Developer Verifier service rolls out to phones running Android 8+ starting June, with APIs and limited-distribution accounts arriving mid-year.
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Legacy Infrastructure Enables AI Agent Hijacking

πŸ”’ This article explains how attackers bypass AI security by exploiting legacy infrastructure that AI agents inherit, such as Active Directory, cloud storage, and unpatched servers. It outlines a staged attack where a CVE-exploited perimeter server leads to credential theft, lateral movement, and compromise of an AI Co-Pilot's knowledge base. The piece urges exposure management that maps dependencies and fixes choke points to protect AI environments.
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North Korean Supply Chain Attack Hits Mastra Packages

πŸ” Microsoft attributed a large-scale npm supply chain attack on the open-source Mastra TypeScript project to North Korea’s Sapphire Sleet group. The threat actor abused a compromised npm maintainer account to publish poisoned packages that disabled TLS verification and contacted attacker C2 servers to deploy cross-platform malware. The payload sought cryptocurrency wallet extensions and performed system reconnaissance, posing a significant risk to developers and downstream users. Microsoft advised auditing dependencies, checking for the malicious easy-day-js package and pinning known-good package versions.
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Professional athletes, wearables, and privacy risks

πŸ”’ Wearables raise acute privacy concerns for professional athletes because biometric data can directly affect livelihoods. While such data can aid training and injury prevention, access by coaches, teams, or leagues risks misuse in discipline, contract negotiations, and betting markets. Experts warn commercialization could enable gamblers and teams to exploit sensitive signals like sleep or heart rate, and aging or injured players may be most vulnerable. Legal and ethical safeguards remain unresolved.
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Weekly Recap: Browser Bugs, EDR Killers, FortiBleed

πŸ“° This week’s recap highlights recurring attack patterns: abused integrations, poisoned websites, fake tools, and ransomware groups disabling security products. Notable incidents include the large-scale FortiBleed campaign compromising FortiGate devices, the Gentlemen RaaS developing the GentleKiller EDR-killing suite, and active exploitation of a critical Splunk flaw. Mobile and crypto-related malware campaigns also featured prominently.
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UK Information Commissioner Resigns After Probe

πŸ“° The UK’s information commissioner, John Edwards, resigned on June 19 after an internal HR investigation concluded there was a case to answer for conduct that fell short of expected standards. Secretary of state Liz Kendall cited vulgar, sexualized language and thanked those who came forward. The ICO reiterated its commitment to a safe workplace and said it does not accept harassment, bullying or discrimination. Edwards acknowledged poor judgement, described his role as untenable and announced his resignation.
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Canada’s Spy Agency Uses Court Warrant to Disrupt Botnets

πŸ›‘οΈ The Federal Court authorized the Canadian Security Intelligence Service to reach into infected servers, SOHO routers, and IoT devices on Canadian soil to neutralize two foreign-run botnets. The public ruling, released June 15, confirms CSIS used its threat reduction warrant powers for the first time to alter, degrade, and destroy botnet data while ensuring the operation targeted devices rather than people. The court found the threat imminent and proportional, but redactions leave the precise foreign actor(s) unidentified.
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Tabletop simulates modern retail ransomware mayhem

πŸ” The Semperis-run "Enter the War Room" tabletop at Infosecurity Europe simulated a ransomware and reputational attack on fictional supermarket BlueCart. Red-team operators exploited supplier trust, stolen credentials, weak MFA, and poor network segmentation to access AI supply-chain systems and exfiltrate loyalty data. Attackers combined misinformation, deepfakes, fake orders, and payroll disruption to magnify harm, while defenders focused on out-of-band communications, honeypots, and refusing ransom demands to limit impact.
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Six CISO Strategies to Master Business Risk

πŸ” Senior security leaders outline how CISOs must expand beyond technical risk to address business risk, aligning security with profitability, operations, and strategic objectives. They recommend partnering with business owners, mapping security to corporate OKRs, building relationships across functions, and running business-focused tabletop exercises. Formal education in governance and integrating cyber into enterprise risk management are stressed as critical steps to ensure cyber risks are evaluated alongside financial and operational risks.
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AryStinger malware converts legacy routers into relays

πŸ” QiAnXin XLab has identified a new malware family named AryStinger that has infected at least 4,300 legacy home routers, turning them into a distributed reconnaissance and proxy network rather than a typical DDoS botnet. The campaign targets routers using Realtek RTL819X chips via old vulnerabilities (CVE-2013-3307, CVE-2016-5681) and favors D-Link DIR-850L units, with infections concentrated in South Korea and China. A second strain targeting QNAP NAS devices via CVE-2025-11837 was also observed; both builds support scanning, tunneling, and remote task execution. Defenders are advised to check for C2 connections, suspicious binaries and processes, retire unsupported devices, and disable remote administration.
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INTERPOL: Cybercrime Surge in Asia and South Pacific

πŸ” INTERPOL warns of a dramatic rise in cybercrime across Asia and the South Pacific driven by rapid digitalization, organized criminal networks, and uneven cybersecurity maturity. Phishing is identified as the most widespread and costly threat, while ransomware, AI-driven scams, deepfakes, and banking trojans have also surged. Authorities are scaling cross-border cooperation and resilience efforts to counter these threats.
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Zero Trust as the AI control plane for Southeast Asia

πŸ”’ At Zscaler’s Zenith Live 2026 in Vienna, the vendor argued that AI agents are rapidly becoming digital workers while regulators tighten data residency and supply‑chain threats move closer to core operations. Zscaler proposes extending its Zero Trust Exchange and SASE platform to govern AI agents, unmanaged devices, multi‑cloud workloads, and B2B partners, positioning zero trust as the control plane for secure AI adoption in regulated, highly connected markets like Southeast Asia. The company emphasised an AI Broker, endpoint AI security, and an AI Access Graph to map and protect AI assets and data flows.
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Prinz Eugen ransomware targets recent files first

πŸ›‘οΈ Threatdown and Malwarebytes researchers detail a new hands-on-keyboard ransomware called Prinz Eugen that prioritizes recently modified files for encryption and leaves no ransom note on compromised systems. Initial access is likely via stolen RDP credentials, with attackers manually deploying a payload named servertool.exe and sometimes using legitimate RMM tools like RemotePC for persistence. The Go-based malware encrypts files recursively without exclusions, uses ChaCha20-Poly1305 and Argon2id-derived keys, and self-deletes while overwriting keys to hinder recovery and forensics.
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Gravity SMTP flaw exposes API keys and system data

πŸ”’ A recently patched information disclosure flaw in the Gravity SMTP WordPress plugin (CVE-2026-4020) allows unauthenticated attackers to retrieve sensitive configuration data and API credentials via a misconfigured REST API endpoint. Wordfence observed exploit attempts beginning in May 2026 and blocking over 17 million requests, with activity spiking in early June. Site owners should update to version 2.1.5, rotate exposed credentials, and review logs for suspicious access from listed IPs.
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