Ransomware & Malware

When Zero-Days Come Knocking: Cisco's Bad Week and the iOS Surveillance Arms Race

When Zero-Days Come Knocking: Cisco’s Bad Week and the iOS Surveillance Arms Race

Last week felt like one of those reminders that attackers never take a break. While we were all trying to get through another Tuesday, the Interlock ransomware gang was busy exploiting a maximum severity RCE vulnerability in Cisco’s Secure Firewall Management Center software – and they’ve been at it since late January.

What makes this particularly frustrating is that this was a zero-day attack. The Interlock ransomware gang had months to work with this vulnerability before Cisco even knew it existed. For those of us managing Cisco environments, this hits close to home. FMC is supposed to be the central management platform for our firewall infrastructure – the thing that’s supposed to help us maintain security posture, not become the entry point for ransomware operations.

The Perfect Storm: When Zero-Days Meet AI and Critical Infrastructure

The Perfect Storm: When Zero-Days Meet AI and Critical Infrastructure

Well, this has been quite the week for security professionals. While we were all settling into our Tuesday routines, threat actors were apparently having a field day with some pretty serious vulnerabilities. Let me walk you through what caught my attention – and why you should care about each of these developments.

The Cisco FMC Nightmare That’s Already Being Exploited

First up, and probably the most urgent item on today’s agenda: Interlock ransomware is actively exploiting a critical Cisco Secure Firewall Management Center vulnerability. CVE-2026-20131 scored a perfect 10.0 on the CVSS scale – and for good reason.

When Honeypots Catch More Than Expected: A Week of Crypto Thieves and State Actors

When Honeypots Catch More Than Expected: A Week of Crypto Thieves and State Actors

I’ve been digging through this week’s security reports, and there’s a fascinating mix of stories that paint a pretty clear picture of where threat actors are focusing their attention right now. From mysterious honeypot messages to a billion-dollar AI security startup, let’s break down what’s actually happening out there.

The Curious Case of the Iranian Bot Message

Sometimes honeypots catch things that make you scratch your head. SANS reported on an interesting discovery in Cowrie logs where multiple sensors detected the same echo command on February 19th: “MAGIC_PAYLOAD_KILLER_HERE_OR_LEAVE_EMPTY_iranbot_w”.

AI Security's Growing Pains: Why Traditional Defenses Are Falling Short

AI Security’s Growing Pains: Why Traditional Defenses Are Falling Short

As someone who’s been watching the security space evolve over the past few years, I’ve noticed something troubling: we’re rushing headfirst into AI adoption while our security practices lag dangerously behind. This week’s news really drives that point home.

The Skills Gap is Real (And Getting Worse)

Let’s start with the elephant in the room. A new report from Pentera surveyed 300 US CISOs and found that most of us are trying to secure AI systems with tools and skills that simply aren’t up to the task. I can’t say I’m surprised, but it’s concerning to see the numbers confirm what many of us suspected.

Even Cybersecurity Firms Aren't Safe: Lessons from This Week's Attack Trends

Even Cybersecurity Firms Aren’t Safe: Lessons from This Week’s Attack Trends

I’ve been digging through this week’s security incidents, and there’s a pattern emerging that should make all of us pause and reassess our defenses. The most telling story? Hackers successfully targeted Outpost24, a cybersecurity firm, with a sophisticated seven-stage phishing campaign aimed at their C-suite executive.

Let me walk you through what happened and why it matters for all of us defending our organizations.

Supply Chain Attacks Are Getting Smarter While Ransomware Groups Adapt to Shrinking Profits

Supply Chain Attacks Are Getting Smarter While Ransomware Groups Adapt to Shrinking Profits

This week brought some sobering reminders about how creative attackers are getting with their methods. Between a sophisticated supply chain campaign hitting developer tools and ransomware groups pivoting their tactics due to declining profits, it’s clear that threat actors are adapting faster than many of us would like.

GlassWorm Returns with a Vengeance

The GlassWorm supply-chain campaign is back, and this time they’ve cast a much wider net. We’re talking about a coordinated attack that hit over 400 packages and repositories across GitHub, npm, and even VSCode/OpenVSX extensions.

Apple's Background Security Updates and the Shift Toward Stealth Attacks

Apple’s Background Security Updates and the Shift Toward Stealth Attacks

Last week brought some fascinating developments in our field, and I wanted to share what caught my attention. We’re seeing a clear pattern emerge: attackers are getting more sophisticated about staying hidden, while defenders are finally building systems that can respond without disrupting users.

Apple’s Game-Changing Background Updates

The biggest news might be Apple’s first Background Security Improvements update. They patched CVE-2026-20643, a WebKit vulnerability, across iPhones, iPads, and Macs without requiring a full OS upgrade. This is huge for us in the enterprise space.

Shadow AI and Social Engineering: Why This Week's Attacks Should Change How We Think About User Education

Shadow AI and Social Engineering: Why This Week’s Attacks Should Change How We Think About User Education

I’ve been watching the security headlines this week, and there’s a troubling pattern emerging that I think deserves our attention. We’re seeing a perfect storm of shadow IT adoption and increasingly sophisticated social engineering attacks that’s creating some serious blind spots in our defenses.

The Shadow AI Problem Is Real

Let’s start with something that’s probably happening in your organization right now: Shadow AI is everywhere. Employees are spinning up AI tools faster than we can track them, and honestly, I don’t blame them. These tools are genuinely useful for getting work done.

Olympic Cybersecurity Lessons and This Week's Linux Privilege Escalation Mess

Olympic Cybersecurity Lessons and This Week’s Linux Privilege Escalation Mess

You know those weeks where the security news feels like someone’s playing whack-a-mole with vulnerabilities? This week definitely hit that vibe. Between some fascinating insights from the Paris Olympics security team and a fresh batch of Linux privilege escalation flaws, there’s quite a bit to unpack.

What We Can Learn from Defending the Olympics

The most interesting piece this week came from Franz Regul, who served as CISO for the Paris 2024 Olympics. If you’ve ever wondered what it’s like to secure an event that literally has the world watching, his insights are worth your time.

When Even Security Pros Get Phished: A Week of Evolving Threats and Hard Truths

When Even Security Pros Get Phished: A Week of Evolving Threats and Hard Truths

You know that uncomfortable feeling when you realize attackers are getting better faster than we are? This week’s security news hit that nerve pretty hard. From malware that’s learning to play hide-and-seek in our dependencies to phishing attacks so sophisticated they’re fooling security executives, we’re seeing some concerning trends that deserve our attention.

The Irony of Targeting Security Professionals

Let’s start with the elephant in the room: a security firm executive got successfully phished this week. Before anyone starts throwing stones, this wasn’t some amateur hour attack. The attackers brought their A-game with DKIM-signed emails, trusted redirect infrastructure, compromised servers, and Cloudflare-protected phishing pages.