Cybersecurity Daily: News & Threats
(00:00:00) PeopleSoft CVE-2026-35273 Exploited, Healthcare Costs Hit $11M & Ransomware at 44% (00:00:57) University of Nottingham Breach Confirmed (00:01:53) Healthcare Breach Costs Hit Record (00:02:37) Ransomware Now 44% of All Breaches (00:03:05) North Korean Developer Supply Chain Campaign (00:03:36) Samsung Patch and CISA Restructure (00:04:15) What to Watch Next A CVSS 9.8 zero-day in Oracle PeopleSoft — CVE-2026-35273 — is being actively exploited with no permanent patch in sight, making it one of the most urgent enterprise vulnerabilities in circulation right now. The ShinyHunters threat group claims 300 compromised instances; independent verification puts confirmed victims above 100, with federal agencies already past their remediation deadline. Oracle's emergency mitigation guidance is all organizations have to work with for now. Among the confirmed victims, the University of Nottingham has disclosed a breach affecting 454,600 student records — personal data, academic records, billing, and financial aid. The university declined the ransom demand, triggering public disclosure. It's the right call structurally, even if costly: 80% of organizations that pay are attacked again within 12 months. The broader breach landscape is shifting. Ransomware now accounts for 44% of all data breaches, up from 32% the prior year. Double extortion is standard practice. Meanwhile, healthcare breach costs have reached a record $11.2 million per incident — 2.5 times the global average — driven by high-value medical records, HIPAA penalties, and legacy system exposure windows averaging 241 days. Elsewhere, a North Korean-linked supply chain campaign is targeting developers via fake LinkedIn recruiters and malicious npm packages with post-install backdoors. Samsung's June update patches 45 vulnerabilities across Galaxy devices. And CISA has appointed Scott Breor to lead its Infrastructure Security Division as the agency enters a workforce expansion phase. Key watchpoints: Oracle's patch timeline for CVE-2026-35273, and whether the ShinyHunters victim count climbs as forensic reviews complete. This episode includes AI-generated content.
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