Cloud Security

When Cloudflare Hiccups and Hackers Get Creative: This Week's Security Reality Check

When Cloudflare Hiccups and Hackers Get Creative: This Week’s Security Reality Check

We’ve had quite a week in security, and honestly, some of these stories hit close to home. From infrastructure giants having configuration mishaps to attackers getting increasingly sophisticated with their social engineering, there’s a lot to unpack here.

The 25-Minute Reminder That BGP Is Still Fragile

Let’s start with the elephant in the room: Cloudflare’s BGP route leak that lasted 25 minutes but caused enough chaos to drop 12 Gbps of traffic. If you’re thinking “that’s not that long,” well, tell that to anyone trying to access IPv6 services during that window.

Microsoft's Emergency Office Patch Shows Why Zero-Days Keep Getting Worse

Microsoft’s Emergency Office Patch Shows Why Zero-Days Keep Getting Worse

Another week, another emergency patch from Microsoft. This time it’s a high-severity Office zero-day that was already being exploited in the wild before they could get a fix out the door. If you’re feeling like we’re seeing more of these lately, you’re not wrong – and there’s a bigger pattern here worth talking about.

The Office Zero-Day Reality Check

Microsoft pushed out emergency security updates last weekend to patch what they’re calling a high-severity Office vulnerability that attackers were actively exploiting. Microsoft patches actively exploited Office zero-day vulnerability. The details are still pretty thin, but the “actively exploited” part should grab everyone’s attention.

When Convenience Becomes a Security Nightmare: This Week's Reality Check

When Convenience Becomes a Security Nightmare: This Week’s Reality Check

You know that feeling when you’re explaining to your non-tech relatives why they shouldn’t click on every popup they see? Well, this week’s security news makes me think we need to have that same conversation with ourselves as professionals. The attacks are getting more sophisticated, and they’re targeting the very tools and conveniences we rely on daily.

The ClickFix Evolution: When Fake CAPTCHAs Meet Microsoft’s Own Tools

Let’s start with something that made me do a double-take. Attackers are now combining the ClickFix method with fake CAPTCHA prompts and—here’s the kicker—legitimate, signed Microsoft Application Virtualization (App-V) scripts to deliver the Amatera infostealer. BleepingComputer broke this story, and it’s a perfect example of how threat actors are weaponizing trust.

SoundCloud's 30 Million User Breach Shows Why Your Personal Data Strategy Needs an Update

SoundCloud’s 30 Million User Breach Shows Why Your Personal Data Strategy Needs an Update

Another Monday, another massive data breach to add to our ever-growing list of “companies that probably should have seen this coming.” This time it’s SoundCloud, with nearly 30 million user accounts compromised – and honestly, the timing couldn’t be worse given what else we’re seeing in the threat landscape this week.

The SoundCloud Reality Check

When I first saw the SoundCloud numbers – 29.8 million accounts – my immediate thought wasn’t just about the scale, but about what this means for how we think about data protection strategies. We’re talking about personal and contact information here, which might not sound as scary as financial data, but let’s be real: that’s exactly the kind of information that makes social engineering attacks devastatingly effective.

From ATM Jackpotting to Zero-Days: This Week's Security Reality Check

From ATM Jackpotting to Zero-Days: This Week’s Security Reality Check

If you’ve been wondering whether cybersecurity is getting more complex or if it’s just Monday morning coffee talking, this week’s news confirms it’s definitely the former. We’re seeing everything from organized crime syndicates hitting ATMs to fundamental flaws in how we secure our development pipelines.

Venezuelan Gang’s ATM Operation Shows Organized Crime’s Tech Evolution

The big story breaking out of Nebraska is pretty sobering – federal prosecutors just charged 31 more people connected to an ATM jackpotting operation allegedly run by Tren de Aragua, a Venezuelan gang. US charges 31 more suspects linked to ATM malware attacks

Nike's 1.4TB Data Breach Shows How Extortion Groups Are Changing the Game

Nike’s 1.4TB Data Breach Shows How Extortion Groups Are Changing the Game

We’ve seen another major corporation fall victim to data extortion, and this time it’s Nike facing down a relatively new player in the ransomware space. The WorldLeaks extortion group claims they’ve stolen 1.4TB of data from the sportswear giant—that’s roughly 188,347 files of what they’re calling “highly sensitive corporate data.”

What caught my attention isn’t just the scale of this breach, but how it fits into some concerning patterns we’re seeing across the threat landscape right now.