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Cybersecurity News Digest — Daily Briefings

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US offers $10M for info on hackers targeting Signal and WhatsApp

🔔 The U.S. Department of State is offering up to $10 million through its Rewards for Justice program for information identifying members of UNC5792 and UNC4221, two groups tied to Russian intelligence and military services. The bounty follows FBI and CISA updates that these groups conducted phishing campaigns targeting Signal and WhatsApp users, including attempts to steal Signal Backup Recovery Keys by impersonating support agents. Targets included U.S. and NATO officials, journalists, NGOs, and researchers.
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OpenAI previews GPT-5.6 Sol with limited access

🛡️ OpenAI has unveiled GPT-5.6 Sol, calling it its "most capable model yet for cybersecurity," but initial access is restricted to a small set of vetted partners at the request of the US government. The preview, announced on June 26, introduces three tiers—Sol, Terra and Luna—and is available via API and Codex to selected partners while OpenAI coordinates with the government on a cyber executive order framework. OpenAI says Sol excels at long-horizon tasks like vulnerability research, includes enhanced safeguards and real-time classifiers, and currently does not autonomously produce full exploits.
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Weekly Cyber Recap: Kernel Flaws and AI Risks

🛡️ This week’s recap highlights how seemingly small mistakes — missed patches, old access paths, or unprivileged namespaces — can yield significant compromises. New findings include the DirtyClone Linux kernel flaw allowing local privilege escalation, active exploitation of a critical PTC Windchill vulnerability, and novel macOS malware designed to deceive AI analysis tools. The briefing also covers disruptive takedowns, trending CVEs, and emerging AI-model risks.
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Evolution of the Pro‑Russia Influence Ecosystem

🛡️ Four years into Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the pro‑Russia influence ecosystem has shifted from wartime tools back toward a global strategic asset. GTIG observes expansion of covert information operations, revived hacktivism, and increasing use of generative AI across planning and content creation. The ecosystem blends state, state‑aligned, and independent actors, targeting the West, Russia’s near abroad, the Middle East, Africa, and domestic audiences while exploiting media mimicry, cyber‑enabled IO, and direct dissemination.
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Fortinet Supports INTERPOL Operation CyberProtect III

🔎 Fortinet contributed to INTERPOL’s Operation CyberProtect III by providing intelligence and analysis through its role in the World Economic Forum’s Cybercrime Atlas. The four-day initiative helped identify dozens of suspicious cases, suspect profiles, and potential victims on content subscription platforms. The operation highlighted trends such as encrypted messaging, coded language, cryptocurrency payments, and AI-generated profiles used to facilitate exploitation.
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236,000 DCloud Uni‑App Sites Fuel Investment Scams

🛡️ Infoblox reports that over 236,000 domains use DCloud Uni‑App templates to power investment scams, including fake crypto exchanges, wallet drainers, gambling sites, and WhatsApp phishing pages. The malicious sites span continents, target multiple languages, and have been active since mid‑2022, with some operators stripping framework fingerprints to evade detection. While many domains use mainstream hosting providers, a subset relies on bulletproof hosting and centralized template sales may explain coordinated activity.
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Start Post‑Quantum Cryptography with Credentials

🔐 Today’s public-key cryptography faces a future threat from quantum computers that can render intercepted ciphertext and stored credentials decryptable. Agencies like the NSA and standards bodies such as NIST have set Q-day deadlines between 2027 and 2035 to phase in quantum-resistant algorithms, while enterprises face multi-year migrations. A practical approach is credentials-first: inventory secrets, prioritize long-lived, high-impact credentials, adopt hybrid cryptography, and design for crypto-agility to reduce Harvest Now, Decrypt Later risks.
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Gamaredon expands malware and exfiltration tactics

🛡️ ESET observed 35 spear-phishing campaigns by the Russian APT group Gamaredon across 2025, primarily targeting Ukrainian government and military entities. Campaigns used HTML smuggling, archive attachments and a patched WinRAR flaw (CVE-2025-8088) to deploy HTA downloaders that drop payloads like PteroSand. The group enhanced persistence and lateral movement via PteroLNK, PteroPaste and PteroSetup while increasingly abusing tunnel and serverless services to hide infrastructure.
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Three real-world incident case studies from GERT

🔍 Over the past year, Kaspersky’s Global Emergency Response Team and MDR service investigated diverse security incidents that informed the Anatomy of a Cyber World Global Report 2026. The post presents three real case studies illustrating how adversaries use credential theft, known vulnerabilities, and lateral movement to achieve persistence, escalate privileges, and deploy ransomware or wipers. It highlights recurring misconfigurations, delayed patching, and blind spots in monitoring as root causes of successful attacks.
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US seizes nearly 400 illegal FIFA World Cup domains

⚖️ The U.S. Justice Department has seized nearly 400 domains tied to illegal live streams of FIFA World Cup 2026 matches. The operation, coordinated via the ICHIP Network and partners, targeted servers and domains across multiple countries, including Peru and Bulgaria. Authorities acted with support from FIFA, broadcasters and industry groups to disrupt piracy and warn of malware and fraud risks to viewers.
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Drone-assisted Disarmament Advances Policing Tech

🛡️ In Sacramento County, deputies used a drone equipped with a high-powered magnet to retrieve a knife from a suspect hiding inside a cluttered residence after negotiators failed to get a response. An officer wearing goggles operated the drone, located the suspect in a garage corner, and secured the weapon, which can be seen spinning as the drone returned it to deputies. The event was posted June 22 on the Sheriff's Office Instagram and accompanied online discussion.
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NAIC Confirms PeopleSoft Breach Exposes Credit Data

🔒 The US National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) disclosed a security breach detected on June 11 and revealed on June 17 that an unauthorized actor exploited a zero-day in Oracle PeopleSoft to access parts of its environment. The attacker obtained and published some statutory financial reporting and credit rating agency data, and possibly routine technical files. NAIC says personal, payment, and several regulatory system records were not compromised and operations are largely restored.
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Turner Industries’ secure cloud-first infrastructure

🔒 Turner Industries migrated to ChromeOS, Google Workspace, Chrome Enterprise Premium, and Cameyo to reduce costs and improve security. The shift extended device lifecycles, cut per-device costs by 40–50%, and saved an estimated $700,000 on new hardware plus $600,000 by converting existing devices with ChromeOS Flex. Faster deployments and simplified management freed IT to focus on strategic work while maintaining strong endpoint protection and legacy app access.
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Suspected Russian Involvement in JLR Cyberattack

🛡️ Security experts have reacted to a New York Times report linking Russian hackers to the Jaguar Land Rover breach, which reportedly cost the British economy £1.9bn. Microsoft flagged the activity, and specialists pointed to the lack of a ransom demand, timing before a vehicle rollout, and novel ransomware as indicators of state involvement. Former JLR security leaders and industry analysts suggest the attack resembled sabotage more than typical cybercrime.
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FBI warns of Russian targeting Signal backup keys

🔔 The FBI has issued a public service announcement warning that multiple clusters of Russian intelligence actors, including FSB officers and military hackers, are targeting high-risk users to steal Signal Backup Recovery Keys. The campaign uses phishing messages masquerading as messaging app support to elicit verification codes, account PINs, and recovery keys. Victims include government officials, military personnel, journalists and Ukrainian officials. Users are advised to only trust official support channels and to generate a new recovery key to invalidate older backups.
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Critical libssh2 Integer Overflow POC Released

🛡️ A public proof-of-concept is available for CVE-2026-55200, a critical libssh2 flaw that allows a malicious SSH server to trigger memory corruption on connecting clients, potentially enabling code execution without credentials or user interaction. The bug affects all releases up to 1.11.1 and scores 9.2 (CVSS 4.0). It stems from an unbounded packet_length parsed during the SSH handshake, producing a 32-bit wrap and an out-of-bounds heap write. A patch was merged on June 12 and the CVE published June 17; distributions are backporting fixes while a tagged release is prepared.
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Cyber Risks and Privacy Threats Around World Cup 2026

🛡️ The 2026 FIFA World Cup presents an unprecedented cyberattack surface across three host countries, with illegal streaming and black-market gambling exposing viewers to significant risks. UpGuard researchers found publicly exposed log systems containing plain-text credentials, IP addresses, and betting details tied to pirate streams and offshore bookmakers. Law enforcement and international operations are disrupting many servers, but resilient criminal networks continue to adapt and monetize audiences via unregulated gambling.
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Hijacked npm and Go packages deploy cross‑platform stealer

🛡️ Cybersecurity researchers discovered two malicious npm packages and a cluster of Go packages that deploy a Python-based information stealer targeting Windows, Linux, and macOS. The attack hides execution in a VS Code task that runs when a project folder is opened and retrieves encrypted JavaScript from blockchain transaction data to configure a socket.io backdoor. The campaign uses a disguised font file to deliver multi-stage payloads and ultimately installs a Python infostealer that exfiltrates credentials, wallets, and developer artifacts.
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