I tested Chrome’s soon-to-be-released vertical tab feature, and it makes the browser so much better
Google is finally making the leap to vertical tabs to catch up with the competition.
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Google is finally making the leap to vertical tabs to catch up with the competition.
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The Ministry of Economy reported discovering unauthorized access to the national bank account registry FICOBA.
The post French Government Says 1.2 Million Bank Accounts Exposed in Breach appeared first on SecurityWeek.
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Ravenna Hub, which lets parents apply and track the status of their kids’ applications across thousands of schools, allowed any logged-in user to access the personally identifiable data associated with any other user, including their children.
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The Roku Channel vs. Google TV Freeplay: Both services offer hundreds of free channels, but one has a far better interface.
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Frankfurt am Main, Germany, 19th February 2026, CyberNewswire
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Formerly named Valkyrie, the company’s funding includes $25 million raised in a Series A round.
The post Venice Security Emerges From Stealth With $33M Funding for Privileged Access Management appeared first on SecurityWeek.
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Cyble Research & Intelligence Labs (CRIL) tracked 1,158 vulnerabilities last week. Of these, 251 vulnerabilities already have publicly available Proof-of-Concept (PoC) exploits, significantly increasing the likelihood of real-world attacks.
A total of 94 vulnerabilities were rated critical under CVSS v3.1, while 43 were rated critical under CVSS v4.0.
In parallel, CISA issued 15 ICS advisories covering 87 vulnerabilities affecting industrial environments. These vulnerabilities impacted vendors including Siemens, Yokogawa, AVEVA, Hitachi Energy, ZLAN, ZOLL, and Airleader.
Additionally, 8 vulnerabilities were added to CISA’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog, reflecting confirmed exploitation in the wild.
CVE-2025-40554 — SolarWinds Web Help Desk (Critical)
CVE-2025-40554 is a critical authentication bypass vulnerability affecting SolarWinds Web Help Desk versions prior to 2026.1. The flaw allows unauthenticated remote attackers to invoke privileged functionality without valid credentials, potentially leading to full compromise of helpdesk systems.
Cyble observed this vulnerability being discussed on underground forums shortly after disclosure, and a public PoC is available. The vulnerability’s presence in enterprise environments increases the risk of initial access and lateral movement.
CVE-2026-1340 — Ivanti Endpoint Manager Mobile (Critical)
CVE-2026-1340 is a critical code injection vulnerability in Ivanti Endpoint Manager Mobile (EPMM). A remote, unauthenticated attacker can exploit the flaw to achieve arbitrary remote code execution without user interaction.
The vulnerability has been captured in dark web discussions and has a publicly available PoC , significantly lowering the barrier to exploitation.
CVE-2026-21509 — Microsoft Office (High Severity, Actively Exploited)
CVE-2026-21509 is a feature-bypass vulnerability in Microsoft Office that allows crafted documents to circumvent built-in security protections. Attackers can deliver malicious Office files that execute payloads once opened by the victim.
The flaw has been actively exploited by threat actors including APT28 and RomCom , highlighting its operational impact.
CVE-2026-1529 — Keycloak (High Impact)
CVE-2026-1529 affects Red Hat’s Keycloak and involves improper validation of JWT invitation token signatures. Attackers can manipulate trusted token contents to gain unauthorized access to organizational resources.
A PoC is available, and the vulnerability surfaced on underground forums shortly after disclosure.
CVE-2026-23906 — Apache Druid (Critical)
CVE-2026-23906 is a critical authentication bypass vulnerability in Apache Druid, enabling unauthorized access to sensitive data stores.
CVE-2026-0488 — SAP CRM & SAP S/4HANA (Critical)
CVE-2026-0488 is a critical code injection vulnerability affecting SAP CRM and SAP S/4HANA. An authenticated attacker can exploit improper function module calls to execute arbitrary SQL statements, potentially resulting in full database compromise.
CISA added 8 vulnerabilities to the KEV catalog during the reporting period. The most important of these were:
KEV additions reflect confirmed exploitation in the wild and often signal heightened ransomware or espionage activity.
CISA issued 15 ICS advisories covering 87 vulnerabilities, with the majority rated high severity.
CVE-2026-25084 & CVE-2026-24789 — ZLAN5143D (Critical)
These critical vulnerabilities in ZLAN Information Technology Co.’s ZLAN5143D device involve missing authentication for critical functions.
Successful exploitation could allow attackers to bypass authentication controls or reset device passwords, potentially enabling unauthorized configuration changes and interference with industrial communications. Researchers also identified internet-facing instances, increasing exposure risk.
CVE-2025-52533 — Siemens SINEC OS (Critical)
CVE-2025-52533 is a critical out-of-bounds write vulnerability in Siemens SINEC OS before version 3.3, potentially enabling memory corruption and system compromise in industrial network environments.
CVE-2026-1358 — Airleader Master (Critical)
CVE-2026-1358 is a critical, unrestricted file-upload vulnerability in Airleader Master systems. Successful exploitation could allow attackers to upload malicious files, potentially resulting in remote code execution in OT environments.
Analysis of the ICS advisories shows that Critical Manufacturing and Energy sectors appear in 98.9% of reported vulnerabilities, showcasing concentrated exposure in these environments.
The cross-sector nature of these vulnerabilities underscores the interdependencies between Energy, Manufacturing, Transportation, Water, and Food systems.
The convergence of high-volume IT vulnerabilities and significant ICS exposure highlights the continued expansion of the attack surface across enterprise and industrial environments. With over 250 PoCs publicly available and multiple KEV additions confirming active exploitation, organizations must prioritize rapid remediation and risk-based vulnerability management.
Security best practices include:
Cyble’s comprehensive attack surface management solutions help organizations continuously monitor internal and external assets, prioritize remediation, and detect early warning signals of exploitation. Additionally, Cyble’s threat intelligence and third-party risk intelligence capabilities provide visibility into vulnerabilities actively discussed in underground communities, enabling proactive defense against both IT and ICS threats.
The post The Week in Vulnerabilities: SolarWinds, Ivanti, and Critical ICS Exposure appeared first on Cyble.
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We’ve all seen this before: a developer deploys a new cloud workload and grants overly broad permissions just to keep the sprint moving. An engineer generates a “temporary” API key for testing and forgets to revoke it. In the past, these were minor operational risks, debts you’d eventually pay down during a slower cycle.
In 2026, “Eventually” is Now
But today, within minutes, AI-powered
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Security researchers have seen the vulnerabilities being exploited to deliver shells, conduct reconnaissance, and download malware.
The post Ivanti Exploitation Surges as Zero-Day Attacks Traced Back to July 2025 appeared first on SecurityWeek.
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G2, the world’s largest and most trusted software marketplace, has recognized ANY.RUN among the Best Software Companies.
The ranking is based on verified reviews from organizations actively using ANY.RUN’s solutions. It reflects the company’s strong international presence and measurable impact across global cybersecurity markets.
Recognition on G2’s Top 50 Best Software Companies list is a reflection of peer validation, powered by customer reviews and feedback. We are very grateful to all analysts, SOC teams, and experts whose insights and evaluations contributed to the ranking.
For ANY.RUN, entering the G2 ranking is a milestone, not a finish line. We will continue to invest in product innovation, community-driven improvements, and measurable outcomes for security operations worldwide.

ANY.RUN delivers measurable operational value to security teams with demanding workloads and strict SLAs. Among results reported by our customers are 50%+ reduction in investigation & IOC extraction time and 30–55% fewer irrelevant escalations.
Beyond the metrics, ANY.RUN’s rising position in software rankings is by its ability to solve operational challenges across the SOC lifecycle:
We support analysts in accelerating investigations, reducing risk, and improving operational outcomes across industries. Among 15,000 SOC teams applying our solutions, there are 3,102 IT & technology companies, 1,778 financial institutions, 1,059 government entities, and 919 healthcare providers.

ANY.RUN is used broadly by organizations with high security requirements, including the world’s largest enterprises:
“We just stopped losing time to uncertainty. Now we can confirm what’s happening faster and escalate only when it actually makes sense.”
Fortune 500 technology company on embedding ANY.RUN to their workflow.
ANY.RUN has become an integral component of modern security operations, enabling teams to make faster, more confident decisions across Tier 1, Tier 2, and Tier 3. It integrates seamlessly into existing workflows and reinforces the full investigation lifecycle from initial validation to in-depth analysis and continuous threat monitoring.
By exposing real attacker behavior, enriching investigations with critical context, and ensuring detections reflect the evolving threat landscape, ANY.RUN helps SOC teams reduce alert fatigue, accelerate response times, and minimize operational impact.
Today, more than 600,000 security professionals and 15,000 organizations worldwide rely on ANY.RUN to streamline triage, reduce unnecessary escalations, and stay ahead of constantly shifting phishing and malware campaigns.
The post G2 Recognizes ANY.RUN Among the Top 50 Best Software Companies in the Region appeared first on ANY.RUN’s Cybersecurity Blog.
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