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Last updated: 08:22 01/07/2026 UTC
Last updated: 23:02 30/06/2026 UTC

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Paid brand-impersonation phishing kits Lucid and Lighthouse scale fake-domain operations

Threat Actor Meta

Updated: 01.07.2026 10:20 · First: 01.07.2026 10:20 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 37

Brand-impersonation phishing has become a paid service, with kits like Lucid and Lighthouse scaling fake-domain operations across 316 brands in 74 countries, increasing the reach and speed of impersonation abuse.

Phantom squatting AI-hallucinated domain phishing campaign

Campaign

Updated: 01.07.2026 10:20 · First: 01.07.2026 10:20 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 35

A phantom squatting campaign is turning AI-hallucinated domains into live phishing and malware lures, putting AI-referred traffic at immediate risk. Attackers are registering the fake domains before anyone else can and standing up phishing pages or malicious app traps on them. The operation is already active in the wild and spans brands and sectors including technology, finance, healthcare, government, and gambling. It shortens the defender response window by converting model output into a ready-made attack surface.

U.S. Commerce Department lifts export controls on Claude Fable 5

Public Sector Action

Updated: 01.07.2026 09:46 · First: 01.07.2026 09:46 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 26

The U.S. Commerce Department lifted export controls on Claude Fable 5, restoring worldwide access after a roughly two-and-a-half-week restriction. Anthropic moved the model back online across Claude.ai, the Claude Platform, Claude Code, and Claude Cowork on July 1, 2026. The reversal eased a government-imposed limit that had forced a broad shutdown and reshaped access to a security-relevant AI service.

Microsoft Azure CLI password-spray campaign using ROPC

Campaign

Updated: 01.07.2026 08:46 · First: 01.07.2026 08:46 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 24

A massive automated password-spray campaign against Microsoft Azure CLI compromised at least 78 accounts across 64 organizations, expanding access risk across cloud tenants. The operation ran from June 12 to June 26, 2026 and used more than 81 million login attempts to harvest valid credentials. Attackers used the deprecated ROPC flow to bypass some Conditional Access Policy protections, showing how legacy OAuth paths can weaken MFA-enforced environments.

ClickFix payload delivery analysis exposes API-driven generation and Downloads-folder AMSI evasion

Technical Analysis

Updated: 01.07.2026 08:32 · First: 01.07.2026 08:32 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 74

Analysis of ClickFix payload delivery shows operators moving to API-driven servers and a Downloads-folder orchestrator, increasing stealth across live campaigns. The backend returns a fresh disguise for each visitor, while the payload itself is unpacked from a downloaded file instead of being pasted directly. That design helps the chain slip past AMSI and leaves fewer obvious traces than the older Windows+R flow. The shift makes clipboard-based initial access harder to catch with conventional email and endpoint controls.

NetScaler ADC/Gateway arbitrary file read security flaw (CVE-2026-10816)

Vulnerability

Updated: 01.07.2026 06:54 · First: 01.07.2026 06:54 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 30

Citrix's NetScaler ADC and NetScaler Gateway now have CVE-2026-10816, a 7.7 flaw that can expose files through unauthenticated arbitrary file read when management access is enabled. The issue affects management-facing paths on NSIP, Cluster Management IP, or SNIP. Citrix has released fixes in 14.1-72.61 and 13.1-63.18 and later builds.

Citrix security patch release for CVE-2026-13474

Security Patch Release

Updated: 01.07.2026 06:54 · First: 01.07.2026 06:54 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 35

Citrix released security updates for NetScaler ADC and NetScaler Gateway to fix six vulnerabilities that could enable arbitrary file reads or denial of service across several product branches. The patched releases include 14.1-72.61 and 13.1-63.18, along with related FIPS and NDcPP builds. One issue, CVE-2026-13474, also requires a manual HTTP/2 configuration change on some appliances to fully close the risk. Citrix said there is no evidence of in-the-wild exploitation.

OpenAI ChatGPT Atlas BioShocking fix

Advisory/Mitigation

Updated: 01.07.2026 00:50 · First: 01.07.2026 00:50 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 34

OpenAI delivered a working fix for BioShocking in ChatGPT Atlas, closing a prompt-injection path that could push an AI browser toward unsafe real-world actions and credential theft. The mitigation addresses a concrete agentic-browser safety weakness that researchers showed across six mainstream products. OpenAI was the only vendor reported to have implemented an effective fix after receiving the disclosure.

Microsoft Quantum Safe Program PQC transition

Advisory/Mitigation

Updated: 01.07.2026 00:20 · First: 01.07.2026 00:20 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 25

Microsoft is accelerating its Quantum Safe Program to move critical products and services to post-quantum cryptography (PQC) by 2029, tightening the organization’s migration timeline for quantum-resistant protection. The company is also adding quantum-safe requirements into its Secure Future Initiative (SFI) as cryptographic risk shifts earlier than previously expected.

Operation Navy Ghost PyPI supply-chain campaign

Campaign

Updated: 01.07.2026 00:02 · First: 01.07.2026 00:02 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 26

The Operation Navy Ghost campaign has targeted Python developers building Telegram bots through trojanized Pyrogram forks, creating a supply-chain path to compromised servers. The malicious packages can expose arbitrary files, Telegram chats, and credentials, and can execute attacker-supplied Python or shell commands. Researchers tied the activity to at least eight PyPI packages published between November 2025 and June 2026.

Trojanized Pyrogram forks with hidden Telegram backdoor

Malware Activity

Updated: 01.07.2026 00:02 · First: 01.07.2026 00:02 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 14

Trojanized Pyrogram forks on PyPI now ship a hidden backdoor that gives attackers remote command execution and file access on compromised Telegram bot servers. The malware activates through concealed Telegram command handlers when an infected bot starts. It can expose files, secrets, chats, contacts, and environment variables, and it returns output back to attackers over Telegram.

RustDuck DDoS botnet activity targeting routers and servers

Malware Activity

Updated: 30.06.2026 20:45 · First: 30.06.2026 20:45 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 27

The RustDuck malware family is hijacking routers, cameras, Android boxes, and servers to assemble a DDoS botnet that can flood targets and knock websites and online services offline. Tracked since February 2026, it is spreading through weak passwords, exposed device interfaces, and multiple old vulnerabilities. Newer samples are being rewritten from C to Rust and add anti-analysis checks plus encrypted command traffic, making the botnet harder to study and shut down.

Nissan hit by network compromise

Incident

Updated: 29.06.2026 23:40 · First: 29.06.2026 23:40 · 📰 2 src / 2 articles · H score: 48

Nissan disclosed a data breach affecting current and former employees after unauthorized access tied to Oracle PeopleSoft exploitation put personnel records at risk. The exposed information may include contact details, banking information, Social Security numbers, Social Insurance Numbers, National Identification Numbers, and financial and tax data across the United States, Canada, Mexico, and Brazil. Nissan has activated incident response, engaged outside cybersecurity help, and is tightening access controls while the investigation continues.

Nissan employee data leak via Oracle PeopleSoft zero-day

Data Leak

Updated: 30.06.2026 19:00 · First: 30.06.2026 19:00 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 49

Nissan disclosed a data leak affecting current and former employees after attackers exploited Oracle PeopleSoft, exposing sensitive payroll and identity records across multiple countries. The exposure may include Social Security numbers, banking details, tax records, and national identification numbers, making the event a significant privacy and fraud risk. Nissan said the breach was tied to a May 27 to June 9 attack window and that affected staff span the US, Canada, Mexico, and Brazil.

Lambsys custom XMRig miner activity on SSH-reachable hosts

Malware Activity

Updated: 30.06.2026 18:47 · First: 30.06.2026 18:47 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 34

The lambsys malware is now being used to deploy a custom XMRig miner and spread to SSH-reachable hosts, turning compromised systems into persistent cryptomining infrastructure. The activity pairs defense evasion with cron-based persistence, increasing the chance that infected servers keep mining after the initial intrusion. It also uses a staged delivery chain that starts from exploited Langflow endpoints and expands the footprint beyond the first victim host.

Silent Swap browser-extension crypto-theft campaign

Campaign

Updated: 30.06.2026 18:40 · First: 30.06.2026 18:40 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 36

The Silent Swap campaign is replacing copied cryptocurrency wallet addresses with attacker-controlled ones, creating a risk of permanent financial loss for crypto users. It spreads through unsigned .NET and Golang installers that drop a malicious Chromium extension masquerading as Google Notes. The operation uses EtherHiding to resolve command-and-control details and hides itself by tampering with browser settings and developer-mode defenses. Telemetry shows infections are globally distributed, with the heaviest concentration in India.

Silent Swap browser-extension clipboard clipper

Malware Activity

Updated: 30.06.2026 18:40 · First: 30.06.2026 18:40 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 36

The Silent Swap malware activity now installs malicious Chromium extensions that intercept copied wallet addresses and reroute cryptocurrency transfers to attacker-controlled wallets, creating direct financial-loss risk for affected users. The activity also steals other clipboard-derived secrets and hides behind a benign-looking Google Notes extension. It uses unsigned .NET and Golang installers and browser tampering to load silently across Chromium-based browsers.

TaskWeaver and Djinn Stealer delivered through abused SimpleHelp RMM tools

Malware Activity

Updated: 30.06.2026 18:34 · First: 30.06.2026 18:34 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 36

The abuse of SimpleHelp RMM turned a trusted support channel into a malware delivery path for TaskWeaver and Djinn Stealer, expanding attacker reach into managed networks and downstream environments. TaskWeaver is a modular Node.js loader disguised as jquery.js and executed from a temporary Cloudflare address. Djinn Stealer is a cross-platform infostealer for Windows, macOS and Linux that targets cloud keys, SSH credentials, source code, wallets and package-registry tokens.

GuardFall shell-trick bypass of command safety checks in AI coding agents

Technical Analysis

Updated: 30.06.2026 17:26 · First: 30.06.2026 17:26 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 25

GuardFall exposed a shell-trick bypass that lets dangerous commands slip past safety checks in open-source AI coding and computer-use agents, putting full account access at risk. The bypass worked against 10 of 11 tested agents and could reach a real shell before the guard understood what would run. Only Continue was built to resist the default attack path.

Business Email Compromise underground operating model and monetization ecosystem

Threat Actor Meta

Updated: 30.06.2026 17:00 · First: 30.06.2026 17:00 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 29

BEC underground activity is expanding into a broader fraud-enablement ecosystem, raising the effectiveness and reach of invoice and payment fraud. Researchers observed actors combining mailbox/SaaS compromise, procurement mapping, call centers, and cash-out services to move stolen funds. Underground discussions from the past year also show rising use of AI-generated business correspondence and recruitment of mule support.

BEC defensive guidance for exposed-credential and account-misuse risk

Defensive Guidance

Updated: 30.06.2026 17:00 · First: 30.06.2026 17:00 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 14

BEC defenders are being pushed toward tighter training and account-response controls as operators combine AI-generated business correspondence, call-center pressure, and exposed credentials to improve payment-fraud success. The guidance focuses on leadership, finance, and procurement staff because those roles are most likely to validate invoices and approve transfers. Faster password resets, session revocation, and MFA enforcement reduce the window for account misuse after a mailbox or SaaS compromise.

IPhone AI chatbot traffic leak of API keys, replayable tokens, and open relays

Technical Analysis

Updated: 30.06.2026 16:49 · First: 30.06.2026 16:49 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 27

LLMKeyLens testing found 444 iPhone AI chatbot apps leaking paid AI access, exposing API keys, replayable tokens, and open relays that let others bill model usage to the developer account. The technical pattern creates direct risk of LLMjacking and hidden prompt exposure across multiple AI providers, including OpenAI. The problem remained widespread after disclosure, with only 28% of notified developers fixing it within three months.

ClickFix mitigation guidance for Windows and macOS

Defensive Guidance

Updated: 30.06.2026 15:00 · First: 30.06.2026 15:00 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 34

Organizations are being urged to harden defenses against ClickFix on Windows and macOS, reducing the chance that social-engineering lures can turn trusted dialogs into malware execution. The guidance pairs user training with administrative restrictions to cut off the main input paths abused by the technique.

Pre-World Cup 2026 fraud surge across partner spoofing, fake sportsbook apps, and travel domains

Trend

Updated: 30.06.2026 14:30 · First: 30.06.2026 14:30 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 31

Pre-tournament fraud around FIFA World Cup 2026 intensified across partners, sportsbook users, and travel buyers, raising the risk of impersonation, payment diversion, and credential theft before kickoff. More than one-third of official partners lacked sufficient DMARC enforcement to stop email spoofing, leaving sponsor and vendor messages exposed. A controlled comparison across eight major sportsbook brands found 64 impersonator apps in the pre-tournament window versus zero in the non-tournament baseline. Fraudulent travel and hospitality domains were also staged months ahead of the event, showing a broad, coordinated abuse pattern.

FIFA World Cup 2026 pre-positioned fraud campaign

Campaign

Updated: 30.06.2026 14:30 · First: 30.06.2026 14:30 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 30

A pre-positioned FIFA World Cup 2026 fraud campaign was already staged before kickoff, widening the risk of email impersonation, fake apps, and travel-site spoofing across tournament-linked sectors. The operation spanned three sectors and at least ten languages, showing coordinated preparation rather than isolated scams. Its reach into sportsbook, hospitality, and partner-email channels increases the likelihood of fraudulent deposits, payment diversion, and brand impersonation during the tournament.

TaskWeaver and Djinn Stealer delivered through exploited SimpleHelp servers

Malware Activity

Updated: 30.06.2026 14:18 · First: 30.06.2026 14:18 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 36

A SimpleHelp exploitation chain is now delivering TaskWeaver and Djinn Stealer, creating a direct path from server-side access to credential theft on managed endpoints. The loader runs as jquery.js through node.exe and acts as an encrypted staging channel rather than a fixed command set. The second stage targets Windows, macOS, and Linux, and it is built to steal cloud, source-control, AI, SSH, browser, and wallet data. Harvested material is packed, encrypted, and exfiltrated to attacker-controlled infrastructure.

Aflac Japan impacted files data exposure

Data Leak

Updated: 30.06.2026 14:12 · First: 30.06.2026 14:12 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 31

Aflac Japan disclosed that certain impacted files exposed policy and coverage details, personal information, and bank account information after unauthorized access to its systems. The exposure affects a Japan-only environment and raises risk for affected policyholders and other individuals whose records were stored on the compromised systems. Aflac said it contained the incident, notified Japanese authorities, and continues to investigate the scope while confirming that U.S. business systems were not accessed.

Aflac Life Insurance Japan Ltd. hit by network compromise

Incident

Updated: 30.06.2026 14:12 · First: 30.06.2026 14:12 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 16

Aflac Japan disclosed an unauthorized access incident that affected certain systems between June 15 and June 25, 2026, creating risk around sensitive insurance records and bank information. The company said impacted files included policy and coverage details, personal information, and bank account information. It also said the incident was limited to systems in Japan and that U.S. business systems were not accessed.

Microsoft Teams admin policy adds approval-based control for third-party bots

Security Tool/Service

Updated: 30.06.2026 13:52 · First: 30.06.2026 13:52 · 📰 1 src / 2 articles · H score: 11

Microsoft Teams introduced an admin policy that lets organizers prevent third-party bots from joining meetings without approval. The control improves visibility over external participants by detecting bots, placing them in the meeting lobby, and requiring confirmation before admission. The update reduces the risk of malicious apps or automated tools being abused for meeting access and social engineering.

Microsoft Teams third-party bot approval controls for meeting social-engineering risk

Defensive Guidance

Updated: 30.06.2026 13:52 · First: 30.06.2026 13:52 · 📰 1 src / 1 articles · H score: 11

Microsoft Teams has added admin controls that block third-party bots without approval, reducing meeting social-engineering risk across managed tenants. The policy improves visibility by identifying bots, placing them in the meeting lobby, and requiring organizer confirmation before admission. Microsoft also plans allow lists, bot blocking, and audit logs to tighten enforcement.