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Daily Security Briefing #128

Daily Security Briefing #128

January 8, 2026 | Read Online AI & human collaboration challenges, critical n8n vulnerabilities, and Cisco Snort 3 data leaks highlight today’s cybersecurity headlines…

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Daily Security Briefing #125

Daily Security Briefing #125

January 7, 2026 | Read Online Critical remote code flaws in n8n and Coolify, ransomware targeting healthcare, AI-driven hacking tools rise…

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Daily Security Briefing #124

Daily Security Briefing #124

January 6, 2026 | Read Online Commodity loader email attacks, critical AdonisJS vulnerability, and botnet abusing residential proxies lead today’s top cybersecurity stories…

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Daily Security Briefing #123

Daily Security Briefing #123

January 5, 2026 | Read Online Largest darknet markets on Telegram, FortiWeb exploited for Sliver C2 persistence, Kimwolf Android botnet hits 2 million devices

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Daily Security Briefing #122

Daily Security Briefing #122

January 2, 2026 | Read Online AI surveillance camera privacy risks, Google Tasks phishing surge, and expanding botnet threats dominate today’s cybersecurity headlines…

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Daily Security Briefing #121

Daily Security Briefing #121

January 1, 2026 | Read Online Top cybersecurity stories of 2025, RondoDox IoT botnet exploits, GlassWorm returns targeting Macs…

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Daily Security Briefing #120

Daily Security Briefing #120

December 31, 2025 | Read Online LinkedIn job scams worldwide, AI-driven NeuroSploit v2 revolutionizes pen testing, GlassWorm targets macOS via VS Code extensions…

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Daily Security Briefing #119

Daily Security Briefing #119

December 30, 2025 | Read Online Magecart’s 50+ scripts hijack e-commerce, critical SmarterMail RCE, IBM API authentication bypass alert

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Daily Security Briefing #117

Daily Security Briefing #117

December 28, 2025 | Read Online\n\nWIRED data leak, MongoBleed vulnerability exploited, Rainbow Six Siege hacked with massive in-game abuse…\n\n—\n\n## Executive Summary\n\nSeveral high-impact cybersecurity incidents have emerged this week, reflecting both targeted data breaches and widespread exploitation of software vulnerabilities. A hacker claims to have accessed and leaked millions of subscriber records from Condé Nast’s WIRED database, signaling ongoing risks to media companies’ sensitive data. Meanwhile, the MongoBleed vulnerability is actively exploited, exposing tens of thousands of MongoDB servers to data theft. In the gaming sector, Ubisoft’s Rainbow Six Siege suffered a significant breach, allowing attackers to manipulate player accounts and virtual economies. These incidents highlight a blend of data privacy concerns and operational security challenges across different industries.\n\n—\n\n## Top Articles\n\nHacker claims to leak WIRED database with 2.3 million records \nA hacker alleges a breach of Condé Nast, claiming to have leaked a WIRED subscriber database containing over 2.3 million records. The threat actor warns of upcoming releases of up to 40 million additional records from other Condé Nast properties, raising concerns about large-scale exposure of personal data from a major media company. The full extent and authenticity of the leak remain under investigation. \nBleepingComputer\n\nExploited MongoBleed flaw leaks MongoDB secrets, 87K servers exposed \nThe MongoBleed vulnerability (CVE-2025-14847) is currently exploited in active attacks, affecting multiple versions of MongoDB. Over 80,000 exposed servers are at risk, with attackers able to access sensitive database secrets and potentially compromise data integrity. This widespread exposure emphasizes the critical need for database administrators to apply patches promptly and monitor for suspicious activity. \nBleepingComputer\n\nMassive Rainbow Six Siege breach gives players billions of credits \nUbisoft’s Rainbow Six Siege has been breached through abuse of internal moderation systems, permitting hackers to ban/unban players and grant enormous amounts of in-game currency and cosmetics. This breach undermines the game’s integrity and highlights vulnerabilities in the developer’s operational security that affect player trust and game economy balance. Ubisoft is investigating and working on remediation. \nBleepingComputer\n\n—\n\n> AI Transparency: This newsletter uses AI to curate, rank, and summarize cybersecurity content from leading industry blogs. All articles link directly to original authors. Executive summaries are AI-generated based on article content. I curate the sources and deliver the digest—the original authors deserve the credit for their excellent work.

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Daily Security Briefing #118

Daily Security Briefing #118

December 29, 2025 | Read Online Bluetooth headphone exploits, record data breach payouts, MongoDB vulnerability under fire, and ongoing phishing campaigns…

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