Cybersecurity Daily: News & Threats
(00:00:00) Autonomous Ransomware, Citrix Bleed 2 & DHS Network Breach (00:01:20) Anubis Gang Citrix Bleed 2 (00:02:13) Adobe ColdFusion CVSS 10 Patches (00:02:40) Apple iOS Accelerated Patching (00:03:14) DHS Intelligence Network Breached (00:03:57) Gentlemen BYOVD and Supply Chain Ransomware (00:04:51) What To Watch Next Cybersecurity's most unsettling milestone arrived quietly: a threat actor tracked as JADEPUFFER used an LLM-powered agent to execute a complete ransomware operation — reconnaissance, credential harvesting, lateral movement, and encryption — with no human directing individual steps. The entry point was CVE-2025-3248, a remote code execution flaw in Langflow. If autonomous ransomware agents can collapse the traditional skill barrier, the volume and attribution calculus for defenders changes structurally. Also in today's briefing: the Anubis ransomware group, a Sphinx rebrand offering affiliates an 80% profit split, has claimed 91 victims through CVE-2025-5777, a CVSS 9.3 Citrix NetScaler authentication bypass. Their weapon of choice once inside? ScreenConnect and Zoho Assist — legitimate remote management tools that sail past signature-based detection. Adobe issued emergency patches for seven CVSS 10.0 vulnerabilities in ColdFusion 2023 and 2025, all enabling arbitrary code execution. No active exploitation confirmed yet, but published patches create a roadmap. Apple beat its own release schedule with iOS 26.5.2, pushing 29 emergency patches — 23 WebKit, 6 kernel-level — citing AI-compressed exploit development timelines as the trigger. The industry-wide drift toward weekly and twice-monthly patch cadences is now a structural shift, not an anomaly. The Department of Homeland Security confirmed a third breach of its Homeland Security Information Network, the unclassified multi-agency coordination platform. Attribution and exfiltration scope remain unconfirmed. Finally: the Gentlemen ransomware group weaponised a Kontron driver zero-day to bypass endpoint tools from Microsoft, ESET, Palo Alto, and SentinelOne, while Sophos exposed a formal TeamPCP–VECT supply chain credential-to-ransomware pipeline. This episode includes AI-generated content.
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