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FCC Strengthens Cybersecurity Rules for Emergency Alert Systems and Undersea Cable Networks

 

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has approved a series of new regulations aimed at strengthening the cybersecurity of the United States' emergency communication systems while modernizing security requirements for the country's undersea cable infrastructure.

The newly adopted rules introduce stronger safeguards for the nation's two primary public warning platforms—the Emergency Alert System (EAS) and Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA)—to reduce the risk of cyberattacks and unauthorized access.

The EAS is widely used by federal, state and local authorities to broadcast emergency information, including severe weather warnings, AMBER Alerts and other public safety notifications through television and radio networks. Meanwhile, the WEA delivers similar alerts directly to mobile devices through text messages.

According to the FCC, a successful cyberattack on either platform by a foreign government, cybercriminal organization or malicious actor could spread misinformation, create public confusion or disrupt emergency response efforts during critical situations.

Any vulnerability in systems like the Emergency Alert System “can have serious consequences,” said FCC Commissioner Olivia Trusty in a statement after the vote.

“That is why it has been appropriate for the Commission to conduct a comprehensive review of the EAS framework by focusing on the security of the system itself,” Trusty continued. “As cybersecurity threats continue to evolve, EAS participants must take appropriate steps to safeguard the infrastructure that supports the delivery of life-saving alerts.”

As part of the new cybersecurity framework, organizations responsible for operating EAS and WEA systems will be required to adopt stronger cyber hygiene measures. These include implementing robust passwords, promptly installing vendor-issued security updates and patches, and deploying firewalls to restrict unauthorized access to critical systems.

The FCC has also introduced a new authentication identification system that will verify emergency alerts before they are transmitted, helping prevent duplicate, fake or unauthorized alerts from being distributed.

In a separate decision, the Commission also approved its first major overhaul of submarine cable regulations in several decades. The updated framework seeks to enhance cybersecurity oversight for undersea cable infrastructure while simplifying licensing procedures for trusted operators.

Under the revised rules, certain undersea cable providers will no longer be required to undergo the extensive national security licensing review conducted by "Team Telecom" before operating cables connected to U.S. territory.

Team Telecom is an interagency group led by the Department of Justice's Foreign Investment Review Section, along with other federal agencies that evaluate the national security implications of telecommunications infrastructure.

The updated policy allows submarine cable applicants to qualify for an exemption if they can self-certify that they meet high security standards designed to improve certainty, streamline reviews and shorten licensing timelines.

“Currently, all submarine cable applications get referred to Team Telecom…the changes adopted would exempt applications from applicants that have operated cables without incident, can certify to the highest national security standards, and agree to ongoing oversight and monitoring,” the FCC said in a release.

The new regulations also expand the FCC's oversight of key operational components within submarine cable systems. Companies responsible for submarine line terminal equipment, which connects undersea cables to U.S.-based terrestrial facilities, will now be required to obtain licenses.

Additionally, the Commission has introduced updated security measures to address risks associated with essential equipment, third-party vendors and vulnerabilities across the broader submarine cable supply chain, further strengthening the resilience of critical communications infrastructure.

Anthropic Restores Limited Access to Claude Mythos 5 AI Model After US Government Approval

 

Earlier limits on Anthropic’s top-tier AI tools have been eased by U.S. officials, reopening limited availability of the Claude Mythos 5 system to certain approved American institutions. Though only recently barred due to fears about potential misuse threatening national safety, the model is now accessible again under tight conditions. Government oversight in high-level AI deployment continues expanding, especially when such systems involve strong digital defense functions. 

While concerns remain, selective reinstatement suggests a shift toward managed access rather than blanket bans. Now cleared by U.S. authorities, Mythos 5 can be used again by groups managing essential infrastructure operations. Over a hundred entities - some among the largest corporations - are set to reconnect under new guidelines. Though access returns in phases, Anthropic emphasizes steady progress restoring function, even as talks continue with federal agencies on widening reach later. 

One goal remains: bringing back full public availability of the Fable 5 system after further review. One restriction began with an export directive dated June 12, forcing Anthropic to shut off entry points to Mythos 5 along with Fable 5. Not long after, OpenAI revealed a delay in launching GPT-5.6 widely - this pause came by direction from U.S. officials. Rather than open access freely, they handed early permissions only to select collaborators, names already passed to federal agencies.

Oversight like this signals a quiet but steady push from regulators to track how powerful artificial intelligence moves into real-world use. Officials worry powerful AI systems might fall into the hands of rival nations - like those in Beijing or Moscow - despite existing barriers. Because these tools can detect system flaws faster than humans, they may speed up digital attacks when protections fail. While designed for defense, their functions could shift toward offense once access is gained through weak points. 

Even infrastructure meant to resist intrusion becomes a target under such conditions. Surprisingly, Anthropic admitted that authorities questioned whether flaws in its security could allow bypassing controls meant to stop abuse of the Fable 5 system when spotting code weaknesses. Although officials noted improvements in handling those dangers, details about the specific defenses enabling partial revival of Mythos 5 remain undisclosed by public agencies. 

Though some defend the selection method, lawyers and tech executives have raised doubts. Questions emerge over who gets picked - free expression supporters point out unclear criteria behind group approvals. Without clear rules on checks, suspicion grows. Safety tests gain backing even as control worries surface; Sam Altman backs strong evaluations yet hesitates at state influence shaping access paths. Decisions made behind closed doors unsettle those watching closely. 

Now, trusted groups working with Mythros 5 won’t need export permits - this applies also to their staff outside the U.S. - as long as they’re named on the official roster. Still, firms left off the list must follow current licensing rules. A number of listed entities belong to Anthropic’s Project Glasswing, it is said, a collaboration hosting around one hundred tech outfits and study centers. 

Now comes news after Donald Trump issued an executive directive creating a non-mandatory process: creators of cutting-edge artificial intelligence may offer their systems to federal authorities for scrutiny during a thirty-day window prior to wider release. Some say this step offers temporary protection until more complete regulatory structures emerge through policy work. 

Yet concerns rise elsewhere - extended delays in launching powerful AI tools might hinder progress, weakening American firms just as international competitors push forward with their own intelligent technologies.

FBI Warns Russian-Linked Hackers Have Shifted Signal Phishing Campaign to Steal Backup Recovery Keys

 


The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) have issued an updated public service announcement warning that Russian intelligence-linked threat actors have expanded an ongoing phishing campaign targeting Signal users. Rather than attempting to intercept authentication codes alone, the attackers are now seeking victims' Signal Backup Recovery Keys, enabling them to restore encrypted cloud backups and gain access to historical conversations.

The latest advisory builds on an alert released in March 2026, when the agencies disclosed that Russian-backed operators were targeting users of commercial messaging applications, particularly Signal, through carefully crafted phishing campaigns. Those earlier attacks focused on compromising accounts by deceiving users into handing over verification codes, account PINs, or linking unauthorized devices to their Signal accounts, instead of defeating the application's end-to-end encryption.

According to the FBI, the threat actors have refined their social engineering techniques by impersonating automated Signal support accounts and introducing a new objective: convincing users to disclose the recovery keys that protect their encrypted backups.

The agencies said the campaign continues to concentrate on individuals considered to be of intelligence value, including current and former U.S. government officials, government personnel from allied nations, military members, political figures, journalists, and officials located in Ukraine.

The activity has been attributed to Russian Intelligence Services (RIS), including officers associated with Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) Border Guards and additional actors operating on behalf of the Russian military. Security researchers publicly track the activity under the designations UNC5792 and UNC4221.

Phishing campaign evolves beyond account hijacking

The updated advisory describes a notable change in the attackers' methods. Earlier phishing attempts largely sought one-time verification codes, Signal PINs, or persuaded victims to connect attacker-controlled devices to their accounts. The current campaign instead attempts to obtain the cryptographic recovery key used by Signal's Secure Backups feature.

To begin the attack, the operators pose as Signal's support team and distribute fraudulent messages claiming the messaging platform is introducing mandatory two-factor verification following an alleged increase in attacks carried out by hackers from Iran and post-Soviet countries. The messages falsely state that the security changes require users to configure Signal Backups in order to avoid losing conversations and media files.

Victims are instructed to navigate through the application's backup settings, enable Secure Backups, reveal the Backup Recovery Key, copy it to the clipboard, and complete what appears to be a legitimate setup process.

Signal's Secure Backups feature allows users to store encrypted copies of conversations on the company's cloud infrastructure. Those backups remain protected through end-to-end encryption, with the Backup Recovery Key serving as the only credential capable of decrypting and restoring the archived data. Because Signal does not retain this key, anyone who obtains it can restore the encrypted backup onto another device.

After victims complete the initial steps, the attackers send a second phishing message while continuing to impersonate Signal support. This follow-up communication claims the user's account is experiencing a synchronization problem and warns that stored messages and media could be permanently lost unless immediate action is taken.

The fraudulent notification instructs users to revisit the backup settings, copy the Backup Recovery Key once again, and paste it directly into the conversation under the pretense of preventing data loss.

If victims comply, the attackers obtain the recovery key and use it to restore the encrypted backup on devices under their control. This grants access to previously archived communications, including private conversations and group chats.

The FBI emphasized that these attacks do not compromise Signal's encryption itself. Instead, they rely entirely on social engineering techniques that manipulate users into voluntarily surrendering the credentials needed to decrypt their own backups.

Compromised recovery keys remain a risk even after creating a new account

The updated advisory also highlights a recovery scenario that affected users may easily overlook.

According to the FBI, creating a new Signal account with the same phone number does not invalidate a Backup Recovery Key that has already been stolen. If attackers previously acquired the key, they may still be able to access any encrypted backups downloaded before the compromise was discovered.

To prevent future backup restorations using a compromised credential, users should generate a new Backup Recovery Key through Signal's backup settings. Creating a replacement key invalidates the previous one for subsequent backup downloads. However, the agencies cautioned that this action cannot revoke access to backups that attackers have already restored using the stolen key.

Agencies urge users to remain cautious of unsolicited support messages

The FBI and CISA reminded users that legitimate messaging platform support teams communicate only through official company email channels. They do not request verification codes through the application itself, nor do they send unsolicited messages instructing users to verify accounts, restore backups, or disclose recovery credentials.

Anyone who believes they may have interacted with the phishing campaign is encouraged to report the incident to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), a local FBI field office, or CISA.

The advisory accentuates the fact that well-designed encryption remains effective only when the credentials protecting it remain under the user's control. Rather than attempting to break modern cryptography, state-sponsored threat actors are increasingly directing their efforts toward manipulating trusted users into revealing the keys that unlock their own protected data.

CISA Orders Immediate Patch for Actively Exploited Cisco Unified CM SSRF Flaw

 

CISA has moved quickly against a serious Cisco vulnerability because the issue is already being exploited and could expose government and enterprise communications systems to deeper compromise. The flaw, CVE-2026-20230, affects Cisco Unified Communications Manager and Cisco Unified CM Session Management Edition, and it sits in a service many organizations rely on for voice and collaboration traffic. 

At the center of the problem is a server-side request forgery vulnerability tied to how the product handles certain HTTP requests. An attacker does not need valid credentials to trigger the flaw, but exploitation depends on the WebDialer service being enabled, which makes exposed or poorly reviewed deployments especially risky. Cisco said a successful attack could allow the creation of files on the underlying operating system, a step that can later be used to elevate privileges toward root access. 

The urgency increased when CISA added the bug to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog and set a remediation deadline of Sunday, June 28, under Binding Operational Directive 26-04. That move signals that federal agencies must treat the issue as an immediate operational priority rather than a routine patch cycle item. In practical terms, the deadline compresses response time and pushes administrators to verify exposure, apply fixes, and reduce attack surface without delay. 

Cisco has already issued remediation guidance, and the strongest interim step is to disable the WebDialer service until patched builds are in place. The fixed releases cited in the advisories include Unified CM 14SU6 and the upcoming 15SU5 path, while some deployments may use a temporary COP file as a bridge until the full update is available. Because there is no complete workaround, organizations that cannot patch quickly need to assume the risk remains active.

For organizations, the lesson is that collaboration platforms are now a high-value target for attackers because they often sit deep inside trusted networks and can expose sensitive internal services if compromised. For security teams, this is not just another Cisco alert; it is a reminder to inventory Unified CM systems, check whether WebDialer is enabled, review logs for suspicious requests, and confirm that exposed management interfaces are minimized. Quick action matters here because the combination of public exploit knowledge, active abuse, and privileged access potential makes this flaw especially dangerous.

Anthropic Tests Mobile Version of Desktop Like Claude Cowork

 


Claude Cowork, an auto-assisted desktop assistant designed to handle long-running knowledge work with minimal user intervention, has been tested on mobile devices by Anthropic, extending the reach of its agentic AI ecosystem. 

A mobile application is not reported to shift computational workloads to smartphones, but rather to function as a remote management interface, which allows users to initiate tasks, monitor their execution, and review progress as the actual computation takes place on a desktop computer. 

In the event that this capability is implemented, it will significantly expand Claude Cowork's accessibility by providing persistent oversight of background workflows such as document creation, spreadsheet generation, file analysis, and report preparation, advancing the integration of AI-driven productivity across devices. 

Claude Cowork will be enhanced with cross-platform capabilities, as well as redesigned into a centrally managed enterprise platform designed to accommodate a variety of organizational workflows through a unified deployment model. It was stated that the approach provides IT administrators with the ability to distribute a single desktop application throughout the organization and assign varying capabilities based on the role of users, enabling employees to access conversational AI, knowledge workers to utilize Claude Cowork when delegating long-term tasks, and software engineering teams to utilize Claude Code without having to deploy separate platforms. 

A long-standing enterprise concern related to AI adoption has been addressed by Anthropic, which emphasizes that the inference can remain within the customer's existing cloud environment, whereas the conversation history can be kept locally. This gives organizations greater control over the handling of data. A number of enterprise identity and device management features are also included in the platform, including single sign-on (SSO), mobile device management (MDM) policy templates, offline installation, and cloud deployment capabilities, allowing organizations to utilize artificial intelligence in an integrated manner rather than introducing an isolated infrastructure based on security, compliance, and governance concerns. 

As part of the update, Claude Chat, Claude Cowork, and Claude Code policy management is separated to provide organizations with granular administrative controls, allowing organizations to selectively enable features and phase their expansion. 

In large enterprises with multiple legal, finance, operations, and engineering teams that require different AI capabilities under distinct governance policies, role-based structures are particularly beneficial. A new feature of Anthropic's enterprise connectivity with Microsoft 365 is the ability for organizations to route data access through their own Microsoft Entra application rather than connecting directly with Anthropic. 

A tenant allowlisting feature, beta support for Microsoft 365 GCC High and DoD environments, as well as an optional local connector allowing Microsoft services to communicate with user devices, ensures that enterprises retain full control over authentication, permissions, audit logging and data access. The administrator will also have the option of exporting deployment policies, validating connectors, verifying Claude models from the cloud provider, and testing configurations before implementing large-scale deployments.

The Anthropic team intends to reduce procurement complexity and position Claude Desktop as enterprise software integrated with existing identity management, compliance, and infrastructure workflows by allowing customers already standardized on Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, or Microsoft Foundry to deploy Claude within their existing cloud estates. 

In the current enterprise AI landscape, success depends on not only model capabilities, but also deployment flexibility, administrative control, governance, and seamless integration into existing enterprise ecosystems as organizations move from limited AI pilot programs to organization-wide deployments. 

The Claude Desktop application, which is available on macOS and Windows, has largely contained Claude Cowork, which executes autonomous tasks directly on the host machine using locally shared files and resources. It has been noted that Anthropic is actively developing a companion mobile application, as screenshots recently surfaced on X indicate. 

Users are expected to be able to start and steer tasks from their smartphones via the Claude mobile application, web interface, or desktop client, while checking execution status through the mobile app. Further, the interface indicates that assigned workloads continue running in the background even after the mobile application has been closed, which demonstrates the purpose of this feature is to oversee tasks persistently rather than executing them locally. 

By following this architecture, mobile devices function as remote management endpoints, while desktop environments remain responsible for computational tasks, file access, document generation, spreadsheet creation, and other resource-intensive operations. 

Anthropic has not yet formally announced full mobile support, but its Cowork documentation already mentions beta pairing support for phones, suggesting that a greater range of cross-device capabilities is being actively developed, with details and eligibility for account eligibility still unknown. 

Claude Cowork's ability to operate continuously as an artificial intelligence work agent will be enhanced if this capability is released, allowing users to initiate, monitor, and manage extended workflows without having to remain physically connected to their desktop computers. Anthropic is further advancing its broader philosophy of agent-driven productivity rather than conventional chatbots. 

Based on Anthropological's latest developments, the next phase of enterprise AI will be characterized by both operational governance and model capability, as organizations increasingly rely on autonomous AI agents to execute business-critical workloads, securing deployment, identity-aware access controls, integration with the cloud, and centralized policy management will become essential features rather than optional ones. 

If enterprises evaluate agentic AI platforms, they should prioritize solutions that align with existing security architectures, compliance obligations, and administrative workflows to ensure productivity gains do not negatively impact visibility, governance, or data security.

OpenAI Delays GPT-5.6 Public Launch After US Government Seeks Limited Rollout

 

OpenAI has agreed to delay the wider release of its upcoming AI model, GPT-5.6, after the Trump administration requested that the company initially restrict access to a limited group of government-approved partners. The request was made due to concerns surrounding the model's advanced capabilities and potential national security implications.

The development, first reported by The Information on June 25, 2026, reflects the growing role of the US government in overseeing the deployment of cutting-edge artificial intelligence models. The move also signals a shift in how frontier AI systems may be introduced to the public going forward.

The government's request comes shortly after its dispute with rival AI startup Anthropic. Earlier this month, on June 12, the Trump administration directed Anthropic to temporarily take its latest AI models, Fable 5 and Mythos 5, offline under new export control measures aimed at preventing access by foreign nationals. Officials cited national security risks behind the decision.

Anthropic described the action as a "misunderstanding" and said it hoped to restore access "as soon as possible," though the incident established a significant precedent for government intervention in AI model releases.

Mythos had been shared with around 40 organisations, including Google, Microsoft and JPMorgan Chase, through a restricted programme known as Project Glasswing. According to reports, the model's ability to autonomously identify software vulnerabilities and carry out complex, multi-step cybersecurity attacks without human involvement raised concerns among US officials.

GPT-5.6 Viewed as Comparable to Mythos

A source familiar with the matter said both OpenAI and the US administration consider GPT-5.6 to be "on par" with Anthropic's Mythos, particularly regarding its cybersecurity capabilities. That assessment prompted officials to recommend a phased rollout instead of an immediate public launch.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman reportedly informed employees during an internal Q&A session on June 25 that GPT-5.6 would first be made available to a select group of enterprise customers.

In a follow-up internal memo, Altman explained that the government would be "approving access customer by customer during this preview period." The request reportedly came from the Office of the National Cyber Director and the Office of Science and Technology Policy, while Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick also advised OpenAI not to proceed without approvals from multiple federal agencies.

Although OpenAI agreed to the arrangement, Altman indicated that the company does not see this as a long-term solution. According to The Information, he wrote: "We’ve made clear to the U.S. government that this is not our preferred long-term model, and will work with them and others in industry to achieve a more sustainable approach for future releases."

Meanwhile, a White House official told CNN that the administration continues "to collaborate with frontier AI labs to develop shared approaches for addressing the challenges of scaling this technology."

The broader public release of GPT-5.6 is expected to take place a "couple of weeks" after the limited preview, depending on how the government-led approval process progresses.

AI Oversight Continues to Evolve

The latest development highlights the absence of a formal federal regulatory framework governing the review of advanced AI models before public deployment.

President Trump's executive order on "Promoting Advanced AI Innovation and Security" encourages AI companies to voluntarily provide frontier models to the government for cybersecurity assessments for up to one month before public release. However, compliance with the programme is voluntary rather than legally required.

For now, OpenAI's agreement with the US government represents one of the clearest examples of collaboration between federal authorities and an AI company. The outcome of GPT-5.6's controlled rollout could influence how other leading AI developers introduce powerful new models in the future.

AI Credential Security Emerges as Critical Risk in Modern Enterprise Infrastructure

 

Surprisingly, artificial intelligence alters how companies build their internal systems. Yet warnings emerge - not about flawed code, but about access methods growing more dangerous by the day. Credentials like API keys, login tokens, or automated service IDs now attract attackers as firms adopt more AI tools. 

A new report highlights an odd trend: defenses focus on outer boundaries, though weak identity controls often cause breaches inside AI environments. Investment flows into firewalls, even when real threats hide within permission structures Security breaches lately show a shift: criminals now aim more at login details instead of bugs within AI tools. A known example occurred when hackers gained access to publishing rights for a software library, slipping in harmful updates that collected AI account passwords, cloud keys, and system tokens across infected setups. 

Elsewhere, hidden project files left public helped adversaries grab artificial intelligence API secrets - before any code ran. Attackers succeeded here by abusing leaked authentication data, not defects in the underlying AI frameworks One reason experts point to is deeper issues baked into how AI systems are built. Instead of isolated logins for narrow tools, today’s setups often let one key open doors across many models and platforms. Because of this shift, losing control of login details means much wider exposure. Stolen tokens now offer criminals far greater leverage than before Among recent findings, signs point to an expanding problem with stolen login details.

A study across sectors showed over 1.27 million credentials tied to artificial intelligence services spilled online in 2025 alone - an uptick compared to prior periods. Old access tokens, though outdated, often stayed valid well beyond issue dates; when such keys fell into the wrong hands earlier, risk lingered far longer than expected Still, old-style safeguards like changing passwords, locking secrets away, or running automatic checks hold value - even if they fall short in AI-driven settings. 

Credentials tied to artificial intelligence tend to appear inside container files, system blueprints, build processes, recorded outputs, along with various hosted platforms. Once leaked access keys get found or reset, harm might already be done - copies hidden elsewhere, misuse underway. What worked before now lags behind how fast these systems share and replicate trust tokens Most security experts suggest companies start viewing AI identifiers much like those assigned to people or devices - restricting access based on necessity. 

Instead of using one wide-reaching API key, authorization should match only the needed tools, functions, or tasks. Each environment - whether used for live operations, trials, data review, or public interaction - ought to have distinct login details. This separation helps contain damage if one set gets exposed Security grows sharper when teams watch systems without pause. 

Ownership of access keys must be obvious, someone always accountable. Seeing what runs at any moment helps spot odd behavior early. Frequent checks on user actions reveal risks before they spread. A login seen outside usual patterns? Treat it as breached, just in case. With AI spreading through daily workflows, tracking who can do what matters more each month. Identity rules once tucked behind firewalls now step forward. They anchor defenses instead of trailing behind. Trust shifts only when proof holds firm.

Inside India’s AI Boom: Workers Training Robots to Replace Human Jobs

 

Indian workers are increasingly being paid to record themselves performing everyday tasks so AI systems can learn how to do those jobs — a trend that’s creating short-term income but raising serious long-term questions about automation and worker displacement. 

Employers and startups are using head-mounted cameras, smartphones and motion sensors to collect “egocentric” footage of activities such as chopping vegetables, folding clothes and assembling parts; that data trains models intended to teach humanoid robots how humans move and interact with objects in real environments. The work has opened a new gig economy niche: workers earn small payments per hour of footage, often in low-cost regions like India where labour is cheaper than in Western markets. 

For many workers the pay provides immediate relief — a few hundred rupees per hour can be meaningful — but the jobs themselves are repetitive and sometimes physically taxing, involving long shifts and continuous filming that can cause eye strain and fatigue. Companies argue this is legitimate work in a growing data economy: capturing real-world human movement is essential for training robots to operate safely and effectively outside labs. Tech firms say egocentric data accelerates progress toward practical household and industrial robots by exposing models to the messy realities of kitchens, factories and crowded workspaces that simulated data cannot reproduce. 

Yet the ethical and economic implications are stark. Critics say the model resembles a paradox: workers are paid to teach machines how to replace them, creating what some call a “data-for-displacement” cycle. Labor advocates worry that once humanoid robots mature, tasks now filmed by humans — from domestic chores to basic factory assembly — could be automated, squeezing informal-sector incomes on which millions depend. Policy analysts note that much public debate on AI’s job impacts focuses on white-collar roles, while the millions in informal or low-wage physical jobs receive far less attention despite being directly targeted by physical AI development. 

Responses are emerging but remain fragmented. Some companies insist robots will complement rather than replace human workers, enabling safer or higher-skilled jobs; others have introduced retraining or higher-paying annotation roles as partial mitigation. Meanwhile civil-society groups and researchers call for stronger labor protections, transparency about how footage will be used, and social-safety nets to support workers displaced by automation, especially in countries with large informal workforces. 

The situation highlights a broader policy challenge: balancing technological progress with social safeguards so that the value created by AI doesn’t accrue only to firms and investors while leaving vulnerable workers behind. As physical AI moves from research labs into everyday life, regulators, companies and worker representatives will need to negotiate fair pay, consent, and transition measures—or risk repeating past technological revolutions that expanded productivity while widening inequality.

Poland arrests four suspects in international SIM-swapping operation linked to multimillion-dollar cryptocurrency thefts

 



Polish law enforcement authorities have arrested four suspected members of an organized cybercrime group accused of orchestrating intricate SIM-swapping attacks that allegedly enabled the theft of millions of dollars in cryptocurrency from victims. The coordinated operation was led by Poland's Central Bureau for Combating Cybercrime (CBZC) with operational assistance from the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), highlighting the cross-border nature of the investigation.

According to investigators, the group combined technical intrusions with social engineering techniques to compromise organizations working alongside telecommunications providers. By infiltrating partner infrastructure and gaining unauthorized access to employee email accounts, the suspects allegedly obtained sensitive information that enabled them to perform fraudulent SIM-swapping attacks.

A SIM-swap attack involves transferring a victim's mobile phone number to a SIM card controlled by an attacker. Once the transfer is completed, the attacker can intercept SMS messages, one-time verification codes, password reset requests, and other communications that rely on the victim's phone number for authentication.

Authorities allege that after taking control of victims' mobile numbers, the cybercriminals intercepted SMS-based authentication messages and email communications before using that access to seize control of cryptocurrency exchange accounts. The attackers then transferred digital assets from compromised accounts before attempting to conceal the proceeds through an extensive laundering operation.

Investigators estimate that the criminal scheme generated millions of U.S. dollars in stolen cryptocurrency. The illicit proceeds were allegedly moved through a distributed financial network consisting of multiple domestic and international bank accounts, international payment platforms, and multi-currency digital wallets in an effort to obscure the origin of the funds. Polish authorities estimate that the total amount laundered exceeded tens of millions of Polish złoty, equivalent to at least approximately US$5 million based on current exchange rates.

In a statement describing the operation, CBZC said the suspects relied on specialized software together with social engineering techniques to gain unauthorized access to infrastructure belonging to organizations cooperating with telecommunications operators, as well as employee email accounts. Investigators said the information obtained during those compromises enabled the illegal cloning and takeover of victims' phone numbers through SIM-swapping attacks.

Authorities further stated that the suspects allegedly treated the criminal enterprise as a continuous source of income, repeatedly moving stolen assets across numerous financial accounts and cryptocurrency wallets located in multiple jurisdictions to complicate financial tracing efforts.

All four suspects have been placed in pre-trial detention. They face allegations including participation in an organized criminal organization, unauthorized access to information systems to facilitate theft, and money laundering. If convicted, the offenses carry penalties of up to 25 years' imprisonment under Polish law.

While Polish authorities have not publicly identified the individuals arrested because of the ongoing international investigation, blockchain investigator ZachXBT claimed that one of the detainees is Wojtek Kulisz, also known online by the alias "Merry." The identification was reportedly based on items visible in official footage released during the police operation. Authorities have not independently confirmed that claim.

Investigators have also declined to disclose which cryptocurrency exchanges were affected or identify the victims, citing the continuing international investigation. Law enforcement agencies say efforts to identify additional victims, trace stolen assets, and pursue further investigative leads remain ongoing.

The case stresses the urgency of the risks associated with SMS-based authentication. Security professionals have long advised cryptocurrency investors and organizations to replace SMS-based two-factor authentication with authenticator applications or hardware security keys whenever possible, as SIM-swapping attacks remain an effective method for bypassing text message verification when attackers successfully compromise telecommunications systems or manipulate carrier processes.

The Growing Call for a CISO Code of Ethics


CISOs today are no longer measured solely by the effectiveness of an organization's cyber defenses. With the increase of cyber threats, the acceleration of offensive capabilities with artificial intelligence, and increasing regulatory scrutiny, the role of enterprise-wide risk management, strategic decision making, and executive accountability has increased. 

The rapid evolution of the security industry, however, exposes a critical imbalance. Although companies increasingly rely on Chief Information Security Officers to safeguard their business operations, sensitive data, and corporate resilience, many security leaders are still lacking board-level support, clearly defined governance frameworks, or an universally accepted ethical framework. 

With the rise of data breaches and the growing concern about AI-enabled cyber threats, the question is not whether CISOs are equipped to deal with technical security challenges, but whether the profession itself requires a code of ethics that guides high-impact decisions that extend beyond cybersecurity in order to guide high-impact decisions. 

In addition to managing firewalls, security tools, and incident response operations, the CISO position has evolved far beyond managing firewalls and security tools to encompass a strategic role that encompasses more than ethical accountability. It is the chief information security officer's responsibility to design, implement, and enforce enterprise-wide security policies as well as ensuring the organization's long-term business strategy remains infused with cybersecurity. 

A CISO is responsible for overseeing the implementation of security technologies and workforce awareness programs to reduce the risk of data breaches and system compromise, in addition to fostering a security-first culture that strengthens organizational resilience and facilitates compliance with a growing range of regulatory and industry guidelines.

An organization's security posture must first be evaluated, existing controls evaluated, capability gaps identified, and risks prioritized to develop a security roadmap aligned with business objectives. These responsibilities require a combination of cybersecurity expertise, executive leadership, and strategic decision-making to accomplish. 

The modern CISO must have extensive knowledge of risks, threat detection, and response, as well as compliance standards such as GDPR, NIST, and SOC 2. They must also be equipped to manage security teams, budgets, and enterprise resources simultaneously. Board members and executive leadership must also be able to translate complex cyber risks into business-focused insights in order to facilitate informed decision-making and facilitate cross-functional collaboration capable of adapting to an increasingly sophisticated threat landscape, which is equally critical. 

According to recent findings, these challenges in governance translate into measurable risks in the operating environment. In the Voice of the CISO survey, conducted during the first quarter of 2025, 1,600 chief information security officers were surveyed across 16 countries by organizations with over 1,000 employees. 

According to nearly two-thirds of respondents, their organizations have suffered a material loss of sensitive information within the past year—a sharp increase over 46% reported in the previous survey. As a consequence, three quarters of CISOs are concerned that their organizations will be susceptible to material cyberattacks in the next 12 months. As a result of increased regulatory oversight and the demand for greater transparency, security leaders are increasingly willing to disclose security incidents as a result of these rising figures, indicating more than an increase in threat activity. 

Patrick Joyce, Global Resident CISO at Proofpoint, observed that CISOs are increasingly open about cyber risk exposure as a result of evolving governance expectations. The majority of respondents stated that they were confident in their organizations' cybersecurity culture, however six out of ten stated that they were not adequately prepared to handle a major cyber-attack. 

A significant proportion of CISOs indicated that they would consider paying a ransomware demand in order to recover critical data or restore business operations, highlighting the difficulty of making ethical decisions during crisis response. The findings also emphasize the complex balance between business continuity, risk management, and ethical decisions. 

A formal code of ethics for CISOs is gaining renewed relevance in light of this background. It is argued that technical expertise alone is no longer sufficient to fulfill the role of Chief Information Security Officer, which involves high-impact decisions affecting national infrastructure, business continuity, compliance with regulatory requirements, and public trust frequently. This framework is deliberately concise, incorporating four mandatory canons that describe the profession's fundamental ethical obligations rather than replacing individual professional judgment. 

By providing advisory guidance, the framework aims to assist security leaders in navigating complex situations in which competing responsibilities are often not clear on a technical or legal level. The code's preamble emphasizes that the CISO's primary responsibility is to protect society, organizational stakeholders, and critical infrastructure, making compliance with the code a mandatory assignment. 

According to the four core principles, cybersecurity professionals are expected to protect society and essential infrastructure, act with honesty, integrity, and stewardship, serve their organizations competently and diligently, and actively strengthen and safeguard the cybersecurity profession as a whole. 

A practical objective complements these mandatory canons, which encourage cybersecurity research, education, mentoring of future practitioners, and the preservation of professional certification values, while discouraging conduct that could adversely affect public confidence or security. There are many ways a professional can undermine ethical credibility, such as creating unnecessary fear or uncertainty, providing false reassurance, promoting poor security practices, exposing inadequately secured systems to a public network, or participating in professional associations that compromise ethical standards. 

A further requirement of the framework is that compliance with the preamble and four canons be enforced, and any conflicts between ethical obligations are resolved in accordance with the order in which the canons are defined. This ensures that security professionals have a structured hierarchy for resolving complex ethical dilemmas without creating conflicting obligations. 

CISOs continue to assume increasingly extensive legal, operational, and ethical responsibilities, and industry experts emphasize that personal crisis management strategies should also be developed to protect security executives along with the organizations they serve. 

A comprehensive incident response plan should not only prepare for technical incident response, but also consider professional, legal, financial, and reputational risks that may arise following an investigation by the government or a major cyber incident. It is important to maintain comprehensive documentation of security decisions, risk assessments, mitigation strategies, and executive communications, including instances where recommendations for security measures are declined by senior management or the board. 

By maintaining an auditable record of both approved and rejected security recommendations, companies can demonstrate due diligence, compliance with regulations, and informed decision making when faced with legal scrutiny. 

A CISO's security strategies must align with changing compliance obligations as they evolve in cybersecurity legislation, disclosure requirements, and regulatory frameworks by engaging in continuous professional development and consulting with legal counsel regularly. 

In addition, experts recommend that executives take out professional liability insurance specifically designed for executive cybersecurity roles, as standard corporate policies may not cover CISOs who have not been appointed as officers or directors by the organization, potentially leaving them personally liable for the consequences. As an added safeguard, a documented ethical decision-making framework will be developed that will serve as a consistent reference when dealing with incidents involving conflicting legal obligations, executive pressures, or sensitive disclosure decisions. 

The establishment of strong working relationships with legal, finance, public relations, and corporate communications teams is essential to the coordination of incident response, which ensures that regulatory notifications, public disclosures, and stakeholder communication remains both legally compliant and ethically sound during times of crisis. 

In the age of cybersecurity, enterprise resilience and national digital security continue to be shaped by it, which means that CISOs are increasingly responsible for more than just technical oversight. Effective cyber leadership requires strong governance, ethical accountability, transparent risk communication, and executive support.

The organizations that empower security leaders with clear ethical frameworks, documented decision-making processes, and cross-functional collaboration will have better chances of navigating an increasingly complex threat landscape while maintaining trust, regulatory compliance, and long-term operational efficiency.

India Removes Spectrum Barriers to Fast‑Track ADAS and Self‑Driving Tech

 

India has taken a significant step toward modernizing road safety by removing licensing requirements for radar sensors used in crash-avoidance and self-driving technologies. Reuters reports that the move is meant to reduce barriers for automakers and encourage the adoption of systems that can help lower the country’s high road fatality rate.

The issue is important because India’s roads remain among the most dangerous in the world, and vehicle safety technology is still unevenly deployed. By clearing spectrum access for key systems, the government is signaling that it wants advanced driver-assistance features such as emergency braking, blind-spot detection, and adaptive cruise control to become easier and cheaper to install. 

Under the new policy, manufacturers no longer need separate licensing to use radar sensors in the 77 GHz to 81 GHz range, which are central to many safety functions. Reuters also says similar relief was granted for systems operating in the 59 GHz band, which support communication between vehicles and roadside infrastructure. 

The policy shift also brings India closer to the regulatory approach used in the United States and the European Union, where standardized hardware can be deployed more freely. That matters for automakers because it reduces the need to build expensive India-specific alternatives, potentially speeding up launch timelines and lowering costs for consumers. 

At the same time, the report highlights that this is not a full autonomous-driving policy and does not solve India’s broader road safety problems on its own. The real test will be whether these regulatory changes translate into safer vehicles on the road, broader adoption by automakers, and measurable reductions in crashes over time.

Microsoft, Europol and Industry Partners Disrupt Amadey and StealC Cybercrime Infrastructure

 

Surprisingly, global police forces took down two key cybercrime systems at once - unusual given past efforts typically focused on one threat. Backing came from Microsoft, adding weight to actions targeting Amadey, a program that loads malicious software. 

Meanwhile, StealC was also hit; it specializes in stealing user data. Though often seen working hand-in-hand during digital break-ins, both were struck together this time. Shifting tactics like this disrupted not just the tools but their entire support network. Recovery now becomes harder simply because so much of their foundation is gone. 

With infrastructure damaged across multiple points, launching new attacks will take far longer than before. Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit joined forces with law enforcement, cyber defense companies, and intelligence teams to tackle organized digital threats. From the start, findings on Amadey emerged through collaboration between ESET, BitSight, Lumen, and Mitsui Bussan Secure Directions. 

Meanwhile, tracking StealC unfolded thanks to insights from Europol, Germany’s Federal Criminal Police Office, authorities in the Netherlands and Denmark, alongside IBM X-Force and Proofpoint. One thread led to another until distinct probes merged into a clearer picture of an extensive crime network. 

From the start, law enforcement leveraged the RICO Act - typically tied to mob-related prosecutions - to dismantle over 200 command hubs controlling malicious software networks. While not obvious at first glance, patterns uncovered by Microsoft’s Copilot system, driven by artificial intelligence, revealed connections across distinct malware groups. Because of these findings, officials began viewing the threats as branches of one coordinated operation rather than separate incidents. 

Microsoft reported that just in the first week of May, systems tied to Amadey and StealC reached over 140,000 machines globally. Though it appeared only in 2023, StealC functions like a rental-based attack tool - focused on grabbing login details from browsers, crypto wallets, messages, email accounts, even game profiles. 

Those using it adjust their attacks individually, while handling what they collect via online control panels built for ease. First seen in 2018, Amadey operates by delivering malicious software to compromised devices. Because of its design, cybercriminals often leverage it to introduce programs like StealC. One breach may lead - through this tool - to several layers of intrusion. 

Though initially subtle, the consequences multiply quickly once active. Modern cybercrime often works like a factory, experts note, where the link between these tools shows how tasks get split up. One crew might build something, another circulate it, while someone else runs it - yet everything fits. Because pieces snap together smoothly, attackers can stack actions into longer sequences even if they never talk. 

The setup thrives on separation, not teamwork. Targeting entire networks of malicious software could work better than going after single components, Microsoft suggests. Instead of isolated attacks on specific tools, focusing on how these systems connect might weaken criminal infrastructure more deeply. 

When security teams hit several points in an attacker's process simultaneously, it becomes harder, slower, and costlier to bounce back. Disrupting coordination between different parts slows down rebuilding attempts significantly. Each broken link adds friction, making revival less likely or much delayed.

Anthropic Alleges Alibaba Conducted Massive AI Capability Extraction Campaign Against Claude

 


Anthropic has accused Chinese technology conglomerate Alibaba and its AI research division, Qwen, of carrying out a large-scale effort to extract capabilities from its Claude family of artificial intelligence models, describing the incident as the most extensive distillation operation the company has encountered.

The allegations were detailed in a June 10 letter sent to U.S. Senate Banking Committee Chair Tim Scott and Ranking Member Elizabeth Warren. In the correspondence, Anthropic claimed that operators linked to Alibaba and Qwen systematically interacted with Claude in an attempt to capture and reproduce some of the model's most advanced capabilities.

According to the company, the activity occurred between April 22 and June 5, 2026. During that period, Anthropic says it recorded more than 28.8 million exchanges associated with the operation. The requests were allegedly distributed across nearly 25,000 fraudulent accounts, enabling the actors to conduct high-volume interactions with the platform while obscuring the true source of the activity.

Anthropic stated that the campaign was not focused on general-purpose chatbot functions. Instead, it allegedly targeted capabilities considered among the most valuable within the Claude ecosystem, including software engineering tasks and advanced agentic reasoning. These functions form a critical component of the company's Mythos Preview model, one of Anthropic's most sophisticated AI systems designed to perform complex reasoning and autonomous task execution.

At the center of the allegations is a technique known as adversarial distillation. In machine learning, distillation generally refers to the process of training a model using outputs generated by another system. While the approach itself is commonly used within the AI industry, Anthropic argues that the method becomes problematic when it relies on unauthorized access to proprietary models.

According to the company, the actors behind the campaign repeatedly queried Claude and collected its responses at scale. Those outputs could then be used as training material for another AI system, allowing developers to reproduce aspects of Claude's behavior without investing the time, computational resources, and research expenditure typically required to build a frontier model from the ground up.

Anthropic warned lawmakers that such activity enables organizations to appropriate years of research and development through large-scale extraction campaigns. The company argued that these operations are designed to gather capabilities developed by leading U.S. AI laboratories and incorporate them into competing systems without bearing the costs associated with original model development.

Beyond intellectual property concerns, Anthropic also raised questions about safety. The company noted that models trained through adversarial distillation may replicate useful capabilities while failing to inherit the safeguards, alignment mechanisms, and risk controls embedded within the original system. As a result, the practice could create AI models that retain advanced functionality but operate with fewer protections against misuse.

The allegations against Alibaba follow earlier claims made by Anthropic regarding unauthorized access attempts linked to Chinese AI developers. In February 2026, the company disclosed that DeepSeek, the startup whose low-cost AI models attracted global attention in 2025, was among several organizations accused of attempting to improperly obtain Claude outputs. Anthropic now characterizes these incidents as part of a broader pattern of repeated efforts to extract capabilities from leading U.S. AI systems.

The dispute emerges amid growing government scrutiny of advanced AI technologies. Earlier this month, Anthropic revealed that it had received guidance from the Trump administration requiring the company to restrict access to its newest AI models, including Fable 5 and Mythos 5. Under the directive, access would be limited to U.S. persons, preventing non-U.S. citizens, including some employees, from interacting with the latest systems.

The issue is also beginning to influence policy discussions on Capitol Hill. Senators Bill Hagerty and Andy Kim are reportedly preparing legislation that would authorize sanctions or other penalties against Chinese organizations found to have improperly obtained outputs from U.S. AI models for the purpose of training competing systems. The proposal reflects growing concern among lawmakers that frontier AI capabilities have become both strategic economic assets and matters of national security.

Alibaba has not publicly responded to the allegations.

The dispute surfaces a new battleground in the global AI race. As companies invest billions of dollars to develop increasingly capable models, concerns are shifting beyond traditional cybersecurity threats toward the protection of model knowledge itself. For AI developers, the challenge is no longer limited to securing infrastructure and data. It increasingly involves preventing the large-scale extraction of capabilities that can be repurposed to accelerate the development of rival systems.

With governments, technology companies, and regulators paying closer attention to model security, the Anthropic-Alibaba dispute may become an early test case for how the industry addresses unauthorized AI capability harvesting and the growing geopolitical competition surrounding advanced artificial intelligence.

Google Introduces New Privacy Controls for Search and Play to Give Users More Control Over Data

 

Google is introducing a fresh set of privacy controls for its Search services and Google Play, allowing users to better manage their saved activity and personalized recommendations. The company announced the changes through an email titled "New privacy settings for Search services," stating that the update is designed to offer users greater transparency and control over how their information is stored and used.

According to Google, Search services include Search, Maps, Shopping, Hotels, Flights, Translate and News. The updated settings will begin appearing in users' Google Accounts over the next few days.

Previously, history tracking and personalization for these services were managed through the Web & App Activity setting. With the latest update, Google is separating these functions into two independent controls—Search Services History and Personalized Recommendations.

"Previously, saving history and personalization were managed by Web & App Activity," Google said in the email. "Going forward, you can better tailor your Search services experience using your new Search Services History and Personalized Recommendations settings."

"These settings let you revisit your past searches and decide if you want your experience to be personalized," Google added.

Under the new system, Search Services History will determine whether activity from Google's Search-related services is saved to a user's account. This includes searches, Maps activity, Shopping searches, Flights and Hotels activity, Translate usage, News activity and other interactions.

Google says this change is intended to make it easier for users to revisit previous searches while continuing to access newer interactive Search features.

The company also noted that media generated during Search interactions will now be included in Search Services History.

"As people increasingly search in new ways, like searching a photo with Lens, Search Services History now includes media from your interactions, which you can stop saving at any time," Google noted in the email.

According to Google, saved media may include images, files, audio and videos generated during interactions with Search services.

"Saved media includes your images, files, audio and video from your interactions with Search services to help improve your experience," Google said.

This functionality covers experiences such as Google Lens visual searches and voice-based Search interactions.

"For example, this lets you revisit your past visual searches with Lens or continue a Search Live conversation about a song you heard," Google noted in the email. "To support these types of interactive product experiences, Google will now save your media to your Search Services History, applying robust privacy and security protections."

Google also confirmed that this saved media may contribute to improving its products and technologies, including artificial intelligence systems.

"Like your Search Services History, your saved media is also used to develop and improve Google services and technologies, including AI models and safety measures," Google said.

Users will have the option to disable the Save Media sub-setting whenever they choose. They can also remove individual media files from their history.

Google explained that if Web & App Activity is already enabled, the new Search Services History setting, along with the Save Media option, will automatically be enabled once the transition is complete.

The company further confirmed that users can later disable media saving and "delete individual pieces of media from your history."

Alongside history controls, Google is also introducing a separate Personalized Recommendations setting for Search services. This control determines whether the company uses saved activity to customize recommendations and content shown across Search services.

The separation of history storage and personalization gives users greater flexibility. Those who want the convenience of saved search history can continue storing their activity without necessarily allowing Google to personalize recommendations using that data.

Following the rollout, Web & App Activity will function independently from the new Search settings, meaning changes made to one will not automatically affect the others

Google is extending a similar approach to Google Play by launching dedicated Play History and Personalization in Play settings.

"For Google Play, you'll have new Play History and Personalization in Play settings, even if you’ve never used this service," Google said.

The company said these new settings will reflect users' existing preferences wherever applicable.

"Your prior choice from Web & App Activity for how long your history is saved will also apply to Search Services History and Play History," Google said.

As a result, previously configured auto-delete periods will carry over to the new settings. Users will continue to have the ability to review, delete or modify their saved activity whenever they choose.

Overall, the update provides more granular privacy controls by separating Search history, Search personalization, Play history and Play personalization into distinct settings rather than relying on a single Web & App Activity switch.

Google said the new privacy controls will gradually become available to users through their Google Accounts over the coming days.

Ubiquiti UniFi OS Flaw Under Active Exploitation CISA Alerts Users


 

A new focus on network infrastructure devices has been drawn after the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) flagged several security vulnerabilities in Ubiquiti's UniFi OS platform. Following evidence of active exploitation, the KEV catalog was updated to include these vulnerabilities. 

Among the identified vulnerabilities are access control bypass, path traversal, and command injection vulnerabilities, which researchers warn can provide attackers with direct access from unauthenticated access to a complete system compromise. With UniFi OS widely deployed across enterprise, government, and service provider environments to manage networking equipment, the vulnerabilities present a significant threat to administrative control planes and sensitive operational information. 

In the latest CISA alert, researchers have demonstrated that Internet-exposed management interfaces present an increased threat, as researchers have demonstrated how these flaws may be chained together to facilitate privileged remote code execution. In response, federal agencies and organizations are urging them to expedite remediation efforts before further exploitation activity occurs. 

Inclusions of the KEVs are based on three distinct vulnerabilities that affect UniFi OS, when combined, significantly increases the attack surface of exposed deployments. In this vulnerability, unauthenticated actors have the capability to alter system settings and administrative configurations without authorization as a result of an access control bypass weakness. 

The CVE-2026-4909 vulnerability exposes a path traversal condition that is capable of exposing underlying operating system files, potentially revealing credentials, configuration data, and other sensitive information that can be used to carry out further intrusions. As a result of an improper input validation attack, CVE-2026-34910 can be exploited to execute arbitrary operating system commands on targeted devices. 

All three vulnerabilities were addressed by Ubiquiti through security updates released in May, noting that exploiting the vulnerabilities does not require prior authorization or elevated privileges, making timely patch deployment critical for organizations using UniFi infrastructure. 

Following the analysis, Bishop Fox security researchers have demonstrated that these vulnerabilities are not isolated risks but can be chained together to permit remote code execution on affected systems using privileged privileges. Using their findings, attackers were able to gain complete control over vulnerable UniFi OS instances by gaining initial unauthorized access, demonstrating how severe this vulnerability is in real-world environments. 

Additionally, the researchers published a detection utility to assist defenders in identifying and remediating vulnerable deployments across enterprise networks on GitHub. In conjunction with the CISA alert, active exploitation concerns have also been raised regarding CVE-2025-67038, a critical root-level command injection vulnerability on Lantronix EDS5000 servers using firmware version 2.1.0.0R3 of Lantronix servers. 

Shell commands are invoked as part of the mechanism used to record failed authentication attempts within the device's HTTP RPC component, where the flaw occurs. During the process of handling user input, improper handling could lead to command injection, making it possible for attackers to execute arbitrary commands with root privileges on the affected system. 

By adding the UniFi OS flaws to CISA's Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog, the vulnerabilities fall under the remediation requirements of Binding Operational Directive 22-01. According to this directive, federal civilian agencies are required to remediate actively exploited vulnerabilities within prescribed timelines in order to reduce operational risk. 

A response has been provided by CISA, which has ordered that agencies rectify CVE-2026-34908, CVE-2026-34909, and CVE-2026-34910 by June 26, 2026, while also recommending that organizations in the private sector evaluate their environments against the KEV catalog and prioritize exposed systems that could be exploited in ongoing attacks. However, reports emerging from community forums and Reddit discussions suggest that threat actors may have weaponized the vulnerabilities before they were disclosed, even though Ubiquiti's security advisories did not explicitly refer to active exploitation. 

Researchers believe that rogue accounts were unexpectedly created by administrators using the username “John Sim,” a process researchers believe might have been linked to automated reconnaissance operations targeting unattended UniFi deployments that were accessible via the internet. 

The Bishop Fox team conducted a technical analysis of CVE-2026-34908 and CVE-2026-34909 and determined that they could be used as part of an authentication gateway bypass resulting from inconsistencies in the way NGINX interprets specially crafted requests. Through the submission of requests that appear to target authentication-exempt routes, but which normalize into protected internal endpoints, attackers may be able to access backend services normally required to log in. 

Research indicates that the bypass can be exploited to trigger CVE-2026-34910, a command injection flaw associated with improper validation of package names during update operations. The researchers validated the bypass against UniFi OS 5.0.6 test environments. 

Using shell metacharacters inserted in crafted package parameters and forcing execution through the affected code path, attackers may be able to execute operating system commands without authentication by enforcing shell metacharacters in the package parameters. This issue goes beyond individual devices. 

As outlined by the Centre for Cybersecurity Belgium, UniFi OS platforms provide visibility and control across switches, gateways, wireless networks, and connected assets, acting as central management systems for network infrastructure. By successfully compromising a system, attackers may be able to harvest credentials, manipulate network configurations, intercept traffic, or advance laterally into broader enterprise environments. 

The same urgency has also been applied to CVE-2025-67038, a critical unauthenticated command injection vulnerability affecting Lantronix EDS5000 devices with a CVSS score of 9.8. Unpatched, the flaw, which was disclosed as part of BRIDGE:BREAK research that uncovered 22 vulnerabilities across Lantronix and Silex products, allows remote command execution with root privileges, posing a comparable risk of complete device compromise. 

Among the steps CISA suggests to minimize exposure is following vendor-issued mitigation guidance, implementing an accelerated patch management procedure consistent with BOD 26-04 requirements, and maintaining sufficient logging to support forensic investigations when exploitation is suspected. 

The directive requires agencies operating cloud-hosted UniFi environments to comply with cloud-specific provisions, or to discontinue affected services if remediation cannot be completed within the specified timeframe. CISA's latest action reminds us that once vulnerabilities affecting network management platforms become publicly available, they can rapidly transform from technical flaws into high-impact security incidents. 

A critical safeguard for enterprise networks remains timely patching, exposure assessment, and continuous monitoring as threat actors continue to target infrastructure components. It is imperative for organizations relying on UniFi OS and other internet-facing management systems to take these findings seriously, ensuring that remediation efforts are paced at a rate that keeps pace with the speed at which attackers operationalize newly discovered vulnerabilities.

Tata Electronics Confirms Cybersecurity Incident, Says Business Operations Remain Unaffected

 

Tata Electronics has acknowledged that it recently experienced a cybersecurity incident affecting certain parts of its IT infrastructure. However, the company stated that the event did not disrupt its business activities or day-to-day operations.

Addressing the incident, a company spokesperson told BleepingComputer, "A few weeks ago, Tata Electronics identified a cybersecurity incident on some of our systems," adding, "Our response protocols were deployed immediately, and the incident has had no impact on our operations across businesses, which remain unaffected."

Tata Electronics, a subsidiary of the Tata Group, specializes in semiconductor production and electronic component manufacturing. Established in 2020, the company has rapidly expanded its footprint in India's technology manufacturing sector and is currently involved in the production and assembly of Apple iPhones and related components.

While the company has not identified the threat actor behind the attack, its statement follows claims made by the World Leaks cybercrime group, which allegedly published data stolen from Tata Electronics.

According to reports, the leaked material includes folders and documents that purportedly contain manufacturing-related information linked to Apple products. The exposed files are said to feature internal component schematics, printed circuit board (PCB) designs, material specifications, and software development kit (SDK) files.

BleepingComputer has reportedly reached out to Apple for clarification regarding the alleged exposure of proprietary information but has not yet received a response.

World Leaks is widely believed to be the successor to the Hunters International ransomware operation, which ceased activities in July 2025. Unlike its predecessor, which encrypted victims' systems, World Leaks focuses solely on data theft and extortion, threatening to release stolen information publicly unless demands are met.

The group has previously been linked to attacks on several major organizations. Among its notable victims are Dell, which confirmed a cybersecurity breach in July 2025, and Nike, which initiated an investigation after cybercriminals claimed to have stolen 1.4 terabytes of company data in January 2026.