Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

CISA BOD 26-02 and the Next Phase of Vulnerability Management

CISA recently published BOD 26-02, the latest Binding Operational Directive shaping how federal agencies manage cyber risk. While attention often gravitates toward highly visible directives like KEV, this one matters for a different reason: it raises the standard for how lifecycle risk must be tracked and sustained over time. BOD 26-02 is described as guidance on unsupported edge devices, which is accurate but incomplete.

Detecting Notepad++ CVE-2025-49144 Using Sysmon Logs

Text editors rarely show up in threat models. Installers show up even less. CVE-2025-49144 changes that. The issue is a local privilege escalation in the Notepad++ Windows installer that can allow a low-privileged user to gain SYSTEM-level execution by abusing insecure executable search behavior during installation. Affected versions include Notepad++ 8.8.1 and earlier, per the NVD record.

Securonix Threat Labs 2025 Annual Autonomous Threat Sweeper Intelligence Insights

The 2025 Annual Cyber Threat Intelligence Report captures the year’s most impactful attack patterns across exploitation-led intrusion, advanced malware (including AI-assisted techniques), and the ongoing evolution of ransomware/RaaS economics.

CrowdStrike Named a Customers' Choice in 2026 Gartner Peer Insights Voice of the Customer for User Authentication

CrowdStrike has been named a Customers’ Choice in the 2026 Gartner Peer Insights “Voice of the Customer for User Authentication” report. For the second consecutive year, CrowdStrike has the highest volume of verified reviews and more 5-star ratings (129) than any other vendor in the report based on 179 overall responses in the 2026 report.

Secure AI Code Generation: From Policy to Practice

IIf you’re using AI to generate code, you’re likely moving faster than ever. You’ve probably felt that surge of productivity when a complex logic problem gets solved in seconds or boilerplate code appears instantly. But here is the problem: speed without guardrails creates security debt, and with AI, that debt accumulates at a terrifying rate. Recent data paints a concerning picture.

What Seemplicity's Exposure Action Report Reveals about Modern Exposure Management

Exposure management has outgrown visibility. With 67M+ findings per year, the real challenge is execution at scale. The 2026 Exposure Action Report shows that risk clusters in predictable places, most exposure is operational (not novel), and meaningful risk reduction comes from consolidation, prioritization, and disciplined remediation workflows — not adding more tools.

Voice Phishing Kits Give Threat Actors Real-Time Control Over Attacks

Researchers at Okta warn that a series of phishing kits have emerged that are designed to help threat actors launch sophisticated voice phishing (vishing) attacks that can bypass multifactor authentication. “The most critical of these features are client-side scripts that allow threat actors to control the authentication flow in the browser of a targeted user in real-time while they deliver verbal instructions or respond to verbal feedback from the targeted user,” Okta says.

Uncovering the Sophisticated Phishing Campaign Bypassing M365 MFA

Lead Analysts: Jeewan Singh Jalal, Prabhakaran Ravichandhiran and Anand Bodke KnowBe4 Threat Labs has detected a sophisticated phishing campaign targeting North American businesses and professionals. This attack compromises Microsoft 365 accounts (Outlook, Teams, OneDrive) by abusing the OAuth 2.0 Device Authorization Grant flow, bypassing strong passwords and Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA).

Pulled Pork and Watermelon: Why Integrated Cybersecurity Depends on Unlikely Synergies

Security teams are facing an attack surface that changes faster than it can be fully understood. Cloud adoption, Software-as-a-Service sprawl, and continuous delivery cycles have dissolved the traditional perimeter, replacing it with an environment where assets change with little notice. Shadow IT, abandoned infrastructure, expired certificates, and misconfigured services quietly expand exposure, often outside formal ownership.