The Week in Vulnerabilities: The Year Ends with an Alarming New Trend 

weekly-vulnerabilities-surge-trend-2026

Cyble Vulnerability Intelligence researchers tracked 1,782 vulnerabilities in the last week, the third straight week that new vulnerabilities have been growing at twice their long-term rate. 

Over 282 of the disclosed vulnerabilities already have a publicly available Proof-of-Concept (PoC), significantly increasing the likelihood of real-world attacks on those vulnerabilities. 

A total of 207 vulnerabilities were rated as critical under the CVSS v3.1 scoring system, while 51 received a critical severity rating based on the newer CVSS v4.0 scoring system. 

Here are some of the top IT and ICS vulnerabilities flagged by Cyble threat intelligence researchers in recent reports to clients. 

The Week’s Top IT Vulnerabilities 

CVE-2025-66516 is a maximum severity XML External Entity (XXE) injection vulnerability in Apache Tika’s core, PDF and parsers modules. Attackers could embed malicious XFA files in PDFs to trigger XXE, potentially allowing for the disclosure of sensitive files, SSRF, or DoS without authentication. 

CVE-2025-15047 is a critical stack-based buffer overflow vulnerability in Tenda WH450 router firmware version V1.0.0.18. Attackers could potentially initiate it remotely over the network with low complexity, and a public exploit exists, increasing the risk of widespread abuse. 

Among the vulnerabilities added to CISA’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog were: 

  • CVE-2025-14733, an out-of-bounds write vulnerability in WatchGuard Fireware OS that could enable remote unauthenticated attackers to execute arbitrary code. 

  • CVE-2025-40602, a local privilege escalation vulnerability due to insufficient authorization in the Appliance Management Console (AMC) of SonicWall SMA 1000 appliances. 

  • CVE-2025-20393, a critical remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability in Cisco AsyncOS Software affecting Cisco Secure Email Gateway and Cisco Secure Email and Web Manager appliances. The flaw has reportedly been actively exploited since late November by a China-linked APT group, which has deployed backdoors such as AquaShell, tunneling tools, and log cleaners to achieve persistence and remote access. 

  • CVE-2025-14847, a high-severity MongoDB vulnerability that’s been dubbed “MongoBleed” and reported to be under active exploitation. The Improper Handling of Length Parameter Inconsistency vulnerability could potentially allow uninitialized heap memory to be read by an unauthenticated client, potentially exposing data, credentials and session tokens. 

Vulnerabilities Under Discussion on the Dark Web 

Cyble dark web researchers observed a number of threat actors sharing exploits and discussing weaponizing vulnerabilities on underground and cybercrime forums. Among the vulnerabilities under discussion were: 

CVE-2025-56157, a critical default credentials vulnerability affecting Dify versions through 1.5.1, where PostgreSQL credentials are stored in plaintext within the docker-compose.yaml file. Attackers who access deployment files or source code repositories could extract these default credentials, potentially gaining unauthorized access to databases. Successful exploitation could enable remote code execution, privilege escalation, and complete data compromise. 

CVE-2025-37164, a critical code injection vulnerability in HPE OneView. The unauthenticated remote code execution flaw affects HPE OneView versions 10.20 and prior due to improper control of code generation. The vulnerability exists in the /rest/id-pools/executeCommand REST API endpoint, which is accessible without authentication, potentially allowing remote attackers to execute arbitrary code and gain centralized control over the enterprise infrastructure. 

CVE-2025-14558, a critical severity remote code execution vulnerability in FreeBSD’s rtsol(8) and rtsold(8) programs that is still awaiting NVD and CVE publication. The flaw occurs because these programs fail to validate domain search list options in IPv6 router advertisement messages, potentially allowing shell commands to be executed due to improper input validation in resolvconf(8). Attackers on the same network segment could potentially exploit this vulnerability for remote code execution; however, the attack does not cross network boundaries, as router advertisement messages are not routable. 

CVE-2025-38352, a high-severity race condition vulnerability in the Linux kernel. This Time-of-Check Time-of-Use (TOCTOU) race condition in the posix-cpu-timers subsystem could allow local attackers to escalate privileges. The flaw occurs when concurrent timer deletion and task reaping operations create a race condition that fails to detect timer firing states. 

ICS Vulnerabilities 

Cyble threat researchers also flagged two industrial control system (ICS) vulnerabilities as meriting high-priority attention by security teams. They include: 

CVE-2025-30023, a critical Deserialization of Untrusted Data vulnerability in Axis Communications Camera Station Pro, Camera Station, and Device Manager. Successful exploitation could allow an attacker to execute arbitrary code, conduct a man-in-the-middle-style attack, or bypass authentication. 

Schneider Electric EcoStruxure Foxboro DCS Advisor is affected by CVE-2025-59827, a Deserialization of Untrusted Data vulnerability in Microsoft Windows Server Update Service (WSUS). Successful exploitation could allow for remote code execution, potentially resulting in unauthorized parties acquiring system-level privileges. 

Conclusion 

The persistently high number of new vulnerabilities observed in recent weeks is a worrisome new trend as we head into 2026. More than ever, security teams must respond with rapid, well-targeted actions to patch the most critical vulnerabilities and successfully defend IT and critical infrastructure. A risk-based vulnerability management program should be at the heart of those defensive efforts. 

Other cybersecurity best practices that can help guard against a wide range of threats include segmentation of critical assets; removing or protecting web-facing assets; Zero-Trust access principles; ransomware-resistant backups; hardened endpoints, infrastructure, and configurations; network, endpoint, and cloud monitoring; and well-rehearsed incident response plans. 

Cyble’s comprehensive attack surface management solutions can help by scanning network and cloud assets for exposures and prioritizing fixes, in addition to monitoring for leaked credentials and other early warning signs of major cyberattacks

The post The Week in Vulnerabilities: The Year Ends with an Alarming New Trend  appeared first on Cyble.

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The Week in Vulnerabilities: The Year Ends with an Alarming New Trend 

weekly-vulnerabilities-surge-trend-2026

Cyble Vulnerability Intelligence researchers tracked 1,782 vulnerabilities in the last week, the third straight week that new vulnerabilities have been growing at twice their long-term rate. 

Over 282 of the disclosed vulnerabilities already have a publicly available Proof-of-Concept (PoC), significantly increasing the likelihood of real-world attacks on those vulnerabilities. 

A total of 207 vulnerabilities were rated as critical under the CVSS v3.1 scoring system, while 51 received a critical severity rating based on the newer CVSS v4.0 scoring system. 

Here are some of the top IT and ICS vulnerabilities flagged by Cyble threat intelligence researchers in recent reports to clients. 

The Week’s Top IT Vulnerabilities 

CVE-2025-66516 is a maximum severity XML External Entity (XXE) injection vulnerability in Apache Tika’s core, PDF and parsers modules. Attackers could embed malicious XFA files in PDFs to trigger XXE, potentially allowing for the disclosure of sensitive files, SSRF, or DoS without authentication. 

CVE-2025-15047 is a critical stack-based buffer overflow vulnerability in Tenda WH450 router firmware version V1.0.0.18. Attackers could potentially initiate it remotely over the network with low complexity, and a public exploit exists, increasing the risk of widespread abuse. 

Among the vulnerabilities added to CISA’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog were: 

  • CVE-2025-14733, an out-of-bounds write vulnerability in WatchGuard Fireware OS that could enable remote unauthenticated attackers to execute arbitrary code. 

  • CVE-2025-40602, a local privilege escalation vulnerability due to insufficient authorization in the Appliance Management Console (AMC) of SonicWall SMA 1000 appliances. 

  • CVE-2025-20393, a critical remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability in Cisco AsyncOS Software affecting Cisco Secure Email Gateway and Cisco Secure Email and Web Manager appliances. The flaw has reportedly been actively exploited since late November by a China-linked APT group, which has deployed backdoors such as AquaShell, tunneling tools, and log cleaners to achieve persistence and remote access. 

  • CVE-2025-14847, a high-severity MongoDB vulnerability that’s been dubbed “MongoBleed” and reported to be under active exploitation. The Improper Handling of Length Parameter Inconsistency vulnerability could potentially allow uninitialized heap memory to be read by an unauthenticated client, potentially exposing data, credentials and session tokens. 

Vulnerabilities Under Discussion on the Dark Web 

Cyble dark web researchers observed a number of threat actors sharing exploits and discussing weaponizing vulnerabilities on underground and cybercrime forums. Among the vulnerabilities under discussion were: 

CVE-2025-56157, a critical default credentials vulnerability affecting Dify versions through 1.5.1, where PostgreSQL credentials are stored in plaintext within the docker-compose.yaml file. Attackers who access deployment files or source code repositories could extract these default credentials, potentially gaining unauthorized access to databases. Successful exploitation could enable remote code execution, privilege escalation, and complete data compromise. 

CVE-2025-37164, a critical code injection vulnerability in HPE OneView. The unauthenticated remote code execution flaw affects HPE OneView versions 10.20 and prior due to improper control of code generation. The vulnerability exists in the /rest/id-pools/executeCommand REST API endpoint, which is accessible without authentication, potentially allowing remote attackers to execute arbitrary code and gain centralized control over the enterprise infrastructure. 

CVE-2025-14558, a critical severity remote code execution vulnerability in FreeBSD’s rtsol(8) and rtsold(8) programs that is still awaiting NVD and CVE publication. The flaw occurs because these programs fail to validate domain search list options in IPv6 router advertisement messages, potentially allowing shell commands to be executed due to improper input validation in resolvconf(8). Attackers on the same network segment could potentially exploit this vulnerability for remote code execution; however, the attack does not cross network boundaries, as router advertisement messages are not routable. 

CVE-2025-38352, a high-severity race condition vulnerability in the Linux kernel. This Time-of-Check Time-of-Use (TOCTOU) race condition in the posix-cpu-timers subsystem could allow local attackers to escalate privileges. The flaw occurs when concurrent timer deletion and task reaping operations create a race condition that fails to detect timer firing states. 

ICS Vulnerabilities 

Cyble threat researchers also flagged two industrial control system (ICS) vulnerabilities as meriting high-priority attention by security teams. They include: 

CVE-2025-30023, a critical Deserialization of Untrusted Data vulnerability in Axis Communications Camera Station Pro, Camera Station, and Device Manager. Successful exploitation could allow an attacker to execute arbitrary code, conduct a man-in-the-middle-style attack, or bypass authentication. 

Schneider Electric EcoStruxure Foxboro DCS Advisor is affected by CVE-2025-59827, a Deserialization of Untrusted Data vulnerability in Microsoft Windows Server Update Service (WSUS). Successful exploitation could allow for remote code execution, potentially resulting in unauthorized parties acquiring system-level privileges. 

Conclusion 

The persistently high number of new vulnerabilities observed in recent weeks is a worrisome new trend as we head into 2026. More than ever, security teams must respond with rapid, well-targeted actions to patch the most critical vulnerabilities and successfully defend IT and critical infrastructure. A risk-based vulnerability management program should be at the heart of those defensive efforts. 

Other cybersecurity best practices that can help guard against a wide range of threats include segmentation of critical assets; removing or protecting web-facing assets; Zero-Trust access principles; ransomware-resistant backups; hardened endpoints, infrastructure, and configurations; network, endpoint, and cloud monitoring; and well-rehearsed incident response plans. 

Cyble’s comprehensive attack surface management solutions can help by scanning network and cloud assets for exposures and prioritizing fixes, in addition to monitoring for leaked credentials and other early warning signs of major cyberattacks

The post The Week in Vulnerabilities: The Year Ends with an Alarming New Trend  appeared first on Cyble.

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Integrating a Malware Sandbox into SOAR Workflows: Steps, Benefits, and Impact 

SOAR platforms are excellent at moving work forward. They trigger playbooks, route incidents, and enforce consistent response steps. What they don’t do well on their own is confirm what’s actually SOAR helps teams move faster, but speed isn’t the real problem. 

The real issue is figuring out what an alert actually means. A sandbox solves that by safely running the file or link and showing what it really does. With clear evidence in hand, playbooks make better decisions, triage moves quicker, and fewer incidents turn into long investigations. 

Let’s walk through how teams use a sandbox inside SOAR, and what that means for faster decisions and lower risk. 

Why a Sandbox Changes SOAR Outcomes 

SOAR platforms are excellent at moving work forward. They trigger playbooks, route incidents, and enforce consistent response steps. What they don’t do well on their own is confirm what’s actually happening

Execution of a suspicious file in ANY.RUN’s safe sandbox environment

That gap matters. When alerts arrive with limited context, automation can only go so far. Teams hesitate, escalations increase, and playbooks stall while someone manually checks files, links, or indicators across multiple tools. 

A sandbox changes this dynamic by adding behavior-based proof directly into the workflow. Instead of relying on assumptions or partial signals, SOAR receives concrete answers: what executed, what connected out, what dropped, and how risky it really is. 

With that clarity: 

  • Triage decisions happen faster 
  • Playbooks trigger with more confidence 
  • Fewer cases get escalated “just in case” 

In practice, SOAR stops being a traffic controller and starts acting like a decision engine; one that’s backed by real evidence, not guesses. 

What a Sandbox Does Inside SOAR Workflows 

ANY.RUN’s sandbox auto-detonates and detects malware inside an archive attached to an email

When integrated into SOAR, ANY.RUN’s sandbox covers a few critical steps that static tools alone can’t reliably handle: 

  • Validates alerts with real behavior: Suspicious files and links are executed in a safe environment to confirm whether they’re actually malicious. This replaces guesswork with evidence early in the workflow. 
  • Uncovers multi-stage and evasive attacks: Many threats reveal their intent only after redirects, downloads, or user interaction. A sandbox follows the full execution chain so SOAR can act on what truly happens, not what appears safe at first glance. 
  • Returns decision-ready context to playbooks: SOAR receives clear verdicts, risk scores, and indicators tied to observed behavior, giving playbooks the confidence to move forward without manual checks. 
  • Reduces unnecessary escalations: With reliable evidence available upfront, fewer cases are passed up the chain “just in case,” keeping response focused and queues under control. 
  • Enables safer automation: Once behavior is confirmed, SOAR can trigger containment, enrichment, and documentation steps with much lower risk of false positives. 

Together, these capabilities allow SOAR workflows to run with more confidence and consistency, even during alert spikes, and without increasing operational overhead. 

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Where Sandbox-Driven SOAR Fits in Real Security Stacks 

In enterprise environments, SOAR operates across SIEM, endpoint, and threat intelligence platforms. A sandbox fits into this layer as the system that validates behavior and feeds trusted context back into automation. 

That’s why Interactive Sandbox integrations and connectors are designed to work directly inside widely used SOAR and security platforms, including: 

Within these environments, sandbox execution is triggered automatically from incidents or alerts. Files, URLs, and artifacts are analyzed in a safe environment, and the results, verdicts, risk scores, indicators, and behavioral context, are returned directly into the SOAR case. 

ANY.RUN’s app for IBM SOAR

This means teams don’t have to switch tools to understand what’s happening. Automation continues with confidence, response actions are triggered earlier, and threat intelligence is enriched as part of the same workflow. 

Sandbox-driven SOAR is embedded into the platforms large organizations rely on today, making it easier to scale response without adding operational complexity. 

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Add behavior-based insight directly to SOAR workflows



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From Faster Triage to Lower Risk: The Business Impact of Sandbox-Driven SOAR 

When ANY.RUN’s sandbox is embedded into SOAR workflows, the impact goes beyond faster investigations. It changes how incidents are prioritized, handled, and closed with measurable effects at both the SOC and business level. 

  • Real-time threat visibility: Observe full attack chains as they unfold, with 90% of malicious activity exposed within the first 60 seconds, significantly accelerating mean time to detect (MTTD). 
  • Higher detection rates for evasive threats: Sandbox execution uncovers low-detection attacks, including multi-stage malware and interaction-dependent phishing, resulting in up to 58% more threats identified and fewer missed incidents. 
  • Lower MTTR across common incidents: With behavior confirmation available early, response steps trigger sooner and manual verification is removed from first-line playbooks, consistently shortening response cycles. 
  • Operational efficiency at scale: Automated sandbox execution reduces manual analysis time, cutting Tier 1 workload by up to 20% and allowing less experienced team members to handle more complex cases with confidence. 
  • Stronger performance during alert spikes: Evidence-driven automation keeps workflows stable during phishing waves or malware campaigns, helping teams avoid backlog growth and burnout. 
  • Clear business-level impact: Faster containment reduces the risk of lateral movement, data loss, and downtime, while automation lowers the cost per incident by minimizing repeated manual effort. 

Turning Sandbox-Driven SOAR into a Scalable Security Strategy 

SOAR works best when automation is backed by proof. By adding a sandbox into the workflow, teams replace uncertainty with clear behavior, shorten response cycles, and keep decisions consistent even under pressure. 

With ready-made integrations across common SOAR and security platforms, sandbox-driven workflows fit naturally into existing stacks. The result is faster response, lower operational load, and reduced business risk, without expanding teams or tools. 

See how sandbox-driven SOAR fits into your environment. Explore ANY.RUN’s Enterprise integrations and unified security workflows. 

About ANY.RUN 

ANY.RUN helps security teams make faster, clearer decisions when it matters most. The platform is trusted by over 500,000 security professionals and 15,000+ organizations across industries where response speed and accuracy are critical. 

ANY.RUN’s Interactive Sandbox allows teams to safely execute suspicious files and links, observe real behavior in real time, and confirm threats before they escalate. Combined with Threat Intelligence Lookup and Threat Intelligence Feeds, it adds the context needed to prioritize alerts, reduce uncertainty, and stop advanced attacks earlier in the response cycle. 

Start a 2-week ANY.RUN trial → 

1. Why integrate SOAR with a malware sandbox?

SOAR moves tickets fast but can’t tell you what’s really happening. Malware sandbox gives you the proof: what ran, what connected out, what files dropped. Your playbooks turn into decision engines instead of waiting on manual checks.

2. How does a malware sandbox fit into SOAR?

Connectors trigger malware sandbox on alerts. You send files or URLs. Results come back fast. Verdicts, risk scores, IOCs, TTPs. Playbooks use that to triage, contain, or close without humans jumping in.

3. What threats does a malware sandbox catch?

Multi-stage phishing and evasive malware. Malware sandbox follows redirects and downloads to show the full chain. Static scans miss this stuff.

4. Does a malware sandbox cut escalations?

Yes. Tier 1 gets clear evidence upfront. They close 70% more cases without passing them up. No more “just in case” handoffs.

5. How quick are malware sandbox results?

For ANY.RUN’s Interactive Sandbox, 90% of malicious behavior shows up in 60 seconds. Your playbooks act right away.

6. Which SOAR platforms work with a malware sandbox?

FortiSOAR, Cortex XSOAR, Splunk SOAR, Microsoft Sentinel, IBM QRadar SOAR, Google SecOps, and more.

7. How do you start with a malware sandbox?

Grab a 2-week trial. Pick your connector. Test it on real alerts. See the difference yourself.

The post Integrating a Malware Sandbox into SOAR Workflows: Steps, Benefits, and Impact  appeared first on ANY.RUN’s Cybersecurity Blog.

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5 Ways MSSPs Can Win Clients in 2026

By 2026, MSSPs will compete less on tooling and more on clarity, speed, and foresight. Security buyers want proof that their provider understands what threats matter now, how fast they can respond, and how security decisions reduce business risk.

At the center of this challenge sits threat intelligence. Not as a research output, but as an operational input shaping every security decision. 

What Clients Will Demand This Year: The Five Deciding Factors 

Winning deals in 2026 means excelling where others fall short. Prospects grill providers on these five areas before signing: 

  • Relentless Threat Blocking: They want evidence you’re stopping attacks they can’t see coming. 
  • Clean, Actionable Alerts: Too many false positives waste time and erode confidence. 
  • Blazing-Fast Incident Response: Slow containment turns small incidents into headline breaches. 
  • Forward-Leaning Threat Hunting: Reactive-only services feel outdated in a zero-trust world. 
  • Undeniable ROI Visibility: Executives need clear proof of risks blocked and value delivered. 

Master these with actionable threat intelligence, and you’ll close more deals while your competitors hassle.

ANY.RUN’s Threat Intelligence Feeds contain real-time streams of malicious IPs, domains, and URLs pulled from millions of sandbox submissions, updated frequently to keep you ahead. TI Feeds are not background data. They are the operational core of detection, response, hunting, reporting, and proactive defense. 

How live threat intelligence impacts the key performance metrics

Here are the five ways to stand out by employing real-time trustworthy threat data. 

1. Early awareness defines credibility 

Clients rarely see the attacks you stop. They only notice the ones you miss. One successful intrusion can erase years of good service and trigger immediate vendor reassessment. 

The difficulty lies in the speed of attacker adaptation. Malware changes quickly, infrastructure rotates, and indicators expire fast. Detection logic based on static or delayed intelligence struggles to keep pace. 

What mature threat intelligence enables: 

TI Feeds deliver IOCs from hands-on analyses to your infrastructure

ANY.RUN’s TI Feeds deliver continuously updated indicators along with sandbox analyses documenting attacker behavior extracted from live malware execution. For MSSPs, this means: 

  • Detection rules that evolve as threats evolve;
  • Faster identification of emerging malware families; 
  • Visibility into infrastructure used in active attacks; 
  • Reduced reliance on outdated or recycled indicators. 

Instead of reacting to incidents reported elsewhere, your MSSP detects threats while competitors are still catching up. For clients, that difference is felt as safety, not statistics. 

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with real-time, 99% unique threat intelligence



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2. Response matters more than perfection 

No MSSP can prevent every incident. What matters is how quickly and confidently you respond. Long investigations, unclear answers, and delayed containment create anxiety at the executive level. 

Most delays come from context gaps. Analysts must validate indicators, understand attackers’ intent, and assess scope before acting. That takes time when intelligence is fragmented. 

TI Feeds give response teams immediate access to: 

TI Feeds by ANY.RUN can be integrated through multiple sources 
  • Fresh, validated indicators of compromise: malicious IPs, domains, and URLs continuously updated from real malware analysis by over 15K SOC teams;
  • Contextual metadata including links to sandbox analysis sessions that provide additional insight into threat behavior;
  • Intelligence that supports instant containment decisions;
  • API-enabled delivery so intelligence can feed automated detection and monitoring systems in real time.

This allows MSSPs to move from alert to action in minutes, not hours. Over time, clients associate your service with decisiveness and control. That perception is critical for renewal conversations. 

3. Proactive security becomes expected 

By 2026, clients will not ask whether you offer threat hunting. They will assume you do. The real question will be whether your hunting produces meaningful results or just internal noise. 

Without fresh intelligence, hunting teams often chase weak signals or outdated hypotheses. That leads to low impact and poor client communication. 

With TI Feeds, MSSPs can anchor threat hunting in reality: 

  •  Hunt for indicators tied to active attacker campaigns; 
  •  Correlate client telemetry with known malicious behavior; 
  •  Continuously refine hypotheses using new feed data; 
  •  Demonstrate findings backed by observable attacker activity. 

This makes threat hunting repeatable, scalable, and easier to justify commercially. 

You can improve your SOC’s metrics by adding TI Feeds to your security stack 

4. Reporting shapes executive perception 

Executives don’t want dashboards full of alerts. They want confidence that risk is being reduced and managed. Poor reporting creates the impression that security work is abstract or disconnected from business reality. 

In many cases, churn begins not after incidents, but after months of unclear reporting. 

TI Feeds allow MSSPs to report on outcomes, not effort: 

  • Indicators with associated threat context help explain why a detected indicator matters; 
  • Detection timestamps and threat labels reveal whether an indicator is recent and connected to active campaigns; 
  • Consistent delivery of validated, actionable IOCs allows reports to reflect real threat activity, not noise. 

Reports become stories of protection delivered, not lists of events processed. This is where MSSPs justify their value in language decision-makers understand. 

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5. Generic defense won’t hold clients 

Clients increasingly expect their security posture to evolve alongside attacker behavior. Generic controls applied uniformly across clients feel outdated and inattentive. The challenge is keeping defenses current without overwhelming analysts. 

By aligning TI Feeds with each client’s risk profile, MSSPs can: 

  • Base decisions on high-confidence threat data, minimizing distraction from low-value or false signals; 
  • Use enriched contextual data to explain how specific IOCs are connected to observed or emerging threats; 
  • Update detection logic as campaigns evolve. 

Security stops being reactive and starts feeling anticipatory. Clients feel seen, protected, and prioritized. That emotional factor matters more than most technical metrics. 

Final Thought: What Clients Are Willing to Pay For 

MSSPs don’t lose clients because attackers exist. They lose clients because they fail to show awareness, speed, and progress. 

In 2026, Threat Intelligence Feeds are the foundation of competitive MSSP services. They power better detection, faster response, meaningful hunting, credible reporting, and proactive protection. The key metrics demonstrate this clearly:  

  • Security teams report up to a 21‑minute reduction in MTTR per case, with automation-ready feeds accelerating triage and containment actions. 
  • Up to 58% more threats identified after integrating TI Feeds into detection rules and playbooks. 
  • Streamlined intelligence lets Tier 1 teams resolve more incidents independently, reducing escalations to senior analysts by 30%

The MSSPs that win will be those who turn intelligence into visible outcomes their clients can trust month after month.

About ANY.RUN 

Trusted by over 500,000 cybersecurity professionals and 15,000+ organizations in finance, healthcare, manufacturing, and other critical industries, ANY.RUN helps security teams investigate threats faster and with greater accuracy.     

Our Interactive Sandbox accelerates incident response by allowing you to analyze suspicious files in real time, watch behavior as it unfolds, and make confident, well-informed decisions.     

Our Threat Intelligence Lookup and Threat Intelligence Feeds strengthen detection by providing the context your team needs to anticipate and stop today’s most advanced attacks.     

Start a 2-week ANY.RUN trial → 

FAQ: Threat Intelligence Feeds for MSSPs 

1. Why will TI Feeds be critical for MSSPs in 2026? 

Because attackers move faster than manual analysis can handle. TI Feeds provide a continuous stream of fresh indicators and attacker behavior that allow MSSPs to detect, respond, and adapt in near real time—something clients will increasingly expect as standard service. 

2. How do TI Feeds improve detection compared to traditional threat intel sources? 

Unlike static or delayed sources, TI Feeds are updated continuously and reflect indicators observed in real malware executions. This helps MSSPs detect emerging threats earlier and avoid relying on outdated indicators. 

3. Can TI Feeds really help reduce MTTR? 

Yes. By supplying validated IOCs and associated TTPs upfront, TI Feeds remove much of the uncertainty during investigations. Response teams spend less time validating alerts and more time containing threats. 

4. How do TI Feeds support threat hunting services? 

TI Feeds give hunters access to indicators and techniques tied to active campaigns, making hunting more focused and defensible. This allows MSSPs to offer threat hunting as a repeatable, intelligence-driven service rather than ad hoc investigation. 

5. Do TI Feeds help with client reporting and renewals? 

They do. TI Feeds enable MSSPs to report on real threats detected, blocked campaigns, and changes in risk exposure. This turns reports into proof of value, which is critical for client retention and contract renewals. 

6. Are TI Feeds useful for proactive protection, not just detection? 

Absolutely. By tracking evolving attacker behavior and infrastructure, TI Feeds help MSSPs keep detection rules updated and defenses aligned with current threats—before attacks reach client environments. 

7. What makes TI Feeds scalable for MSSPs managing many clients? 

TI Feeds automate intelligence delivery. Instead of analysts manually researching each alert, intelligence is continuously ingested into security tools, allowing MSSPs to protect more clients without proportional growth in headcount. 

The post 5 Ways MSSPs Can Win Clients in 2026 appeared first on ANY.RUN’s Cybersecurity Blog.

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Release Notes: AI Sigma Rules, Live Threat Landscape & 1,700+ New Detections

ANY.RUN is wrapping up 2025 with updates that take pressure off your SOC and help your team work faster. You can now get AI‑generated Sigma rules, track threats by industry and region, and detect new campaigns with better speed and accuracy.  

Let’s see what these improvements bring to your security stack. 

Product Updates 

Industry & Geo Threat Landscape in TI Lookup 

Industry & geo threat landscape data for the Tycoon2FA phishkit

TI Lookup now gives every indicator extra context showing which industries and countries are linked to the threat of your industry and where similar activity is trending. It’s an easy way to see whether a threat actually affects your business or if it’s just background noise.

Built on live data from more than 15,000 organizations, this update helps your team tighten detection focus and reduce blind spots: 

  • See what matters first: Identify threats targeting your market or region so you can prioritize high‑risk activity. 
  • Triage faster: Skip irrelevant alerts and go straight to the ones that match your exposure. 
  • Work with better insight: Use targeted intelligence to guide hunts, automate enrichment, and improve MTTD. 

With TI Lookup, you spot threats earlier, respond faster, and keep your attention where it counts. 

The threat landscape changes fast
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AI Sigma Rules in ANY.RUN Sandbox 

AI Sigma Rules displayed inside ANY.RUN sandbox

The new AI Sigma Rules feature in the Interactive Sandbox turns your confirmed detections into ready‑to‑use Sigma rules automatically. Instead of spending hours writing them by hand, you can now take the rule straight from the sandbox and add it to your SIEM or SOAR in seconds. 

The rules are created from the same processes, files, and network events you see in the sandbox, so they stay closely tied to real attacker behavior. That means better accuracy and quicker response without extra effort. 

Here’s what you gain: 

  • Less manual work: Every confirmed threat instantly becomes a reusable detection rule. 
  • Better coverage: Each investigation now improves how your SOC spots similar attacks later. 
  • Faster action: Analysts spend less time writing rules and more time acting on real signals. 

Cut MTTR by 21 min and reduce MTTD to 15 sec
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Threat Coverage Updates 

In December, our detection team rolled out another wave of coverage improvements with: 

  • 86 new behavior signatures 
  • 13 new YARA rules 
  • 1,686 new Suricata rules 

These updates enhance phishing detection, expand coverage of stealers, loaders, and RATs, and clean up false positives across multi‑stage attacks. 

New Behavior Signatures 

SHINYSPIDER malware detonated inside ANY.RUN’s Interactive Sandbox 

Fresh signatures add visibility into persistence, lateral movement, and abuse of system tools seen across mixed environments. 

Highlighted families include: 

These detections help analysts catch miner and loader activity earlier and recognize evasion tricks like rundll32 abuse or PowerShell obfuscation.

New YARA Rules 

OCTORAT process identified by ANY.RUN’s Interactive Sandbox 

We added 13 YARA rules to improve detection across new malware strains and living‑off‑the‑land tools. 

Highlighted families are STEAL1, SANTASTEALER, UNIXSTEALER, OCTORAT, DonutLoader.

These cover credential theft, modular loaders, and dual‑use administrative tools to ensure better coverage for both Windows and Linux‑based systems. 

New Suricata Rules 

We’ve added 1,686 Suricata rules targeting phishing, botnet activity, and evasive network behaviors often missed by standard IDS. 

Together, these bring better coverage of C2 traffic, phishing domains, and low‑signal campaign infrastructure. 

Businesses that are constantly being bombarded by hundreds of hacker attacks daily can upgrade their proactive defense with ANY.RUN’s Threat Intelligence Feeds

Expand threat coverage and cut MTTR with ANY.RUN’s TI Feeds 

Powered by sandbox analyses of the latest malware & phishing samples across 15K SOCs, they deliver fresh, real-time malicious network IOCs to numerous companies around the globe. Enriched with detailed sandbox reports, TI Feeds not only help you catch emerging threats early but also provide your analysts with actionable intelligence for fast remediation, boosting your detection rate and driving down the MTTR. 

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Threat Intelligence Reports 

In December we published new TI Reports summarizing late‑year activity: 

Each brief distills TTPs, campaigns, and IOCs from live submissions to help SOC teams anticipate what’s next. 

About ANY.RUN 

ANY.RUN powers SOCs at more than 15,000 organizations, giving them faster visibility into live threats through interactive sandboxing and cloud‑based intelligence. 

Our Interactive Sandbox lets you analyze Windows, Linux, and Android samples in real time, watch the execution flow second‑by‑second, and pull IOCs instantly, no installs, no waiting. Combined with Threat Intelligence Lookup and Threat Intelligence Feeds, you get a single workflow built to speed up investigation, cut MTTD and MTTR, and keep your SOC focused on the right threats. 

Start 2026 with faster detection, better threat intel, and less noise.  

Request trial of ANY.RUN’s products for your SOC. 

The post Release Notes: AI Sigma Rules, Live Threat Landscape & 1,700+ New Detections appeared first on ANY.RUN’s Cybersecurity Blog.

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Malware Trends Q4 2025: Inside ANY.RUN’s Latest Threat Landscape Report 

We’re glad to present our regular quarterly report highlighting the most prominent malicious trends of the last three months of 2025, as observed by ANY.RUN’s community. 

Following the release of our annual report on key threats and milestones, this report offers a closer look at the threat landscape of the final chapter of 2025. 

The Malware Trends report Q4 features top malware types, families, phishing kits, TTPs, APTs, and other notable insights. 

You can turn to the previous Q3 report for reference. 

Key Takeaways 

  • Threat activity remained steady, with sandbox usage up 6% quarter over quarter and over 1 billion IOCs collected, reflecting sustained investigative demand rather than volume spikes. 
  • Stealers still dominate, even after a 16% decline, confirming credential theft as a primary attacker objective. 
  • RATs and backdoors gained momentum, with RATs up 28% and backdoors up 68%, signaling a shift toward persistent access and modular malware. 
  • XWorm and open-source RATs surged, with XWorm up 174%, showing attackers favor adaptable, widely shared toolsets over saturated stealer families. 
  • Phishing continued to evolve, led by Tycoon and EvilProxy, underscoring the growing sophistication of PhaaS and 2FA bypass campaigns. 

Summary 

Sandbox activity summary
  • Total sandbox sessions: 2,015,181  
  • Malicious: 389,636  
  • Suspicious: 75,113  
  • IOCs: 1,015,431,934  

During the last quarter of 2025, overall threat investigation activity remained stable — no drastic growth in volume. The total number of sandbox analyses conducted in ANY.RUN’s Interactive Sandboxincreased slightly by 6%, surpassing 2 million since Q3. 

Over one billion indicators were gathered by our community during analysis sessions. A total of 389,636 samples were labeled as malicious, and 75,113 as suspicious. 

Top Malware Types: Highlights 

Top malware types Q4 2025
  1. Stealer: 36,685  
  1. RAT: 23,788 
  1. Loader: 19,070  
  1. Backdoor: 10,560  
  1. Ransomware: 7,317  
  1. Adware: 5,854  
  1. Botnet: 5,149 
  1. Trojan: 2,813  
  1. Miner: 2,668  
  1. Keylogger: 2,598 

Although the list of top malware types looks similar to Q3 at first glance, several notable changes in activity levels should be pointed out: 

  • Stealer dominance persists despite a 16% drop. This signals that credential theft remains a priority for attackers targeting financial sectors. 

Widespread families: Lumma,  StealcBlank Grabber 

  • RAT surged (+28%), overtaking Loaders’ second place. A clear indication of remote access tools gaining traction for persistent post-exploitation in enterprise environments. 

Widespread families: XWormQuasar RATAsyncRAT 

  • Loader threats moved one place down despite a slight decrease in detections. 

Widespread families: Smoke LoaderPureCrypterHijackLoader 

Backdoor‘s 68% activity growth reflects modular malware kits proliferating, enabling easier customization and evasion of traditional defenses. 

Adware moved up two places with a 31% rise in activity, while ransomware detections decreased by the same percentage. 

At the lower end of the list there are Botnet with 5K detections, Trojan with 2.8K, Miner with 2.6K, and Keylogger with 2.5K. 

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Multi-stage attack detonated inside ANY.RUN sandbox 

ANY.RUN’s Interactive Sandbox enables businesses and SOC teams to proactively identify cyber threats by analyzing files and URLs inside interactive Windows, Linux, Android VMs.  

  • Stronger Protection for Businesses: Early detection and shorter MTTD minimize risks, safeguarding infrastructure and reputation. 
  • Higher Efficiency & ROI: Faster investigations cut costs, reduce analyst load, and power quicker incident resolution. 
  • Smarter Decision-Making: Flexible, enterprise-grade solution enhances visibility into threats, allowing for insight-driven action. 

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Top Malware Families 

Top malware families Q4 2025
  1. XWorm: 13,945  
  1. AsyncRAT: 5,056  
  1. Quasar: 4,711  
  1. Vidar: 4,498  
  1. Stealc: 4,432 
  1. Remcos: 3,598  
  1. Lumma: 3,399  
  1. Blackmoon: 3,208 
  1. AgentTesla: 3,136  
  1. Mirai: 3,067 

This section indicates a number of drastic changes in intensity and volume of certain threats. Key observations include: 

XWorm, driven by its adaptability across industries like manufacturing and healthcare, showed a +174% surge. 

XWorm IOCs from Threat Intelligence Lookup 

  • centre-instruction[.]gl[.]at[.]ply[.]gg 
  • uk-compete[.]gl[.]at[.]ply[.]gg 
  • 176[.]113[.]73[.]167 

Find more IOCs in TI Lookup with this query: 

threatName:”xworm” AND domainName:”” 

  • AsyncRAT and Quasar grew by 46% and 27%, showing open-source RATs outpacing commercial stealers, fueled by underground sharing and rapid evolution. 

AsyncRAT IOCs from Threat Intelligence Lookup  

  • xoilac[.]livecdnem[.]com 
  • asj299[.]com 
  • 94[.]154[.]35[.]160 

Find more IOCs in TI Lookup with this query: 

threatName:”asyncrat” AND domainName:”” 

Lumma’s fall from first to eighth place with a -65% plunge highlights attacker shifts to newer, less-detected families, reducing reliance on saturated stealer platforms. 

Lumma IOCs from Threat Intelligence Lookup  

  • handpaw[.]click 
  • mattykp[.]click  
  • 159[.]198[.]70[.]75 

Find more IOCs in TI Lookup with this query: 

threatName:”lumma” AND domainName:”” 

Vidar and Stealc with 4K+ detections each re-emerged in Q4, indicating a sudden end-of-year growth. 

Another addition to the chart is Blackmoon with 3,208 detections. At the same time, AgentTesla and Remcos threats saw a reduction in detections and went from second and fourth places to tenth andseventh respectively. 

Ensure early threat detection via Threat Intelligence Feeds 

TI Feeds provides fresh data from 15k organizations 

Gain a live view of the threat landscape with fresh, actionable IOCs delivered to you from investigations done across 15,000 companies. 

  • Refine detection and response: Rich threat context and integration opportunities power your SOC for proactive defense. 
  • Mitigate risks of breaches: Expanded threat coverage and visibility into threats help stay ahead of attackers without wasting time on false alarms. 
  • Improve performance rates: Unique, noise-free indicators beat alert fatigue and promote early detection even for hidden and evasive threats. 

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Top TTPs 

Top MITRE ATT&CK TTPs Q4 2025

The top 10 most detected techniques, tactics, and procedures (TTPs) show significant shifts from quarter to quarter — a reminder that threat actors never stop refining and changing their methods. 

The number of detections for TTPs mostly grew: the first place is taken up by Subvert Trust Controls: Install Root Certificate, T1553.004 with 227,451 detections. In Q3, the first place was taken by a TTP with activity rate twice as small. 

Second place was still occupied by Masquerading: Rename Legitimate Utilities, T1036.003 with 105,539 detections (+9%). 

A new addition to the list, Command and Scripting Interpreter: Windows Command Shell , T1059.003, came third with 71,608 detections. 

1. Subvert Trust Controls: Install Root Certificate, T1553.004: 227,451 

2. Masquerading: Rename Legitimate Utilities, T1036.003: 105,539 

3. Command and Scripting Interpreter: Windows Command Shell, T1059.003: 71,608 

4. Command and Scripting Interpreter: PowerShell, T1059.001: 64,684 

5. Virtualization/Sandbox Evasion: Time Based Checks, T1497.003: 51,910 

6. Boot or Logon Autostart Execution: Registry Run Keys / Startup Folder, T1547.001: 46,007 

7. System Services: Service Execution, T1569.002: 38,515 

8. Masquerading: Match Legitimate Resource Name or Location, T1036.005: 35,278 

9. Scheduled Task/Job: Scheduled Task, T1053.005: 21,460 

10. Signed Binary Proxy Execution: Rundll32, T1218.011: 19,236 

Collect Fresh Threat Intelligence with Threat Intelligence Lookup 

TI Lookup sharing info on threats submitted in Germany and relevant for finance companies  

TI Lookup offers a searchable database of fresh Indicators 
of Compromise (IOCs), Attack (IOAs), and Behavior (IOBs) belonging to the latest cyber attacks on 15,000 companies. 

  • Build proactive defense: Actionable threat intelligence drives targeted and insightful research for staying ahead. 
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Phishing Activity in Q4 2025 

Phishing activity Q4 2025

Overall phishing activity by uploads159,592 

Activity by phishing kits  

Phishkits: 

  1. Tycoon41,046  
  1. EvilProxy14,258  
  1. Sneaky2FA7,272 
  1. Mamba2FA3,904  
  1. Salty2FA350  

Q4’s results align with our annual report’s conclusions: phishing is a prevalent type of cyber threat and Tycoon dominates in this category: 

  • It remained at the top of the list with double the intensity of detections. Same with EvilProxy: it stayed second with 51% increase in volume. This underscores PhaaS maturation, with kits now bundling advanced 2FA bypass for high-value targets. 
  • Sneaky2FA moved from fourth to third place with a whopping +138% rise in activity. 
  • Salty2FA moved two places down, pointing to 2FA fatigue exploitation accelerating in enterprise phishing campaigns. 
  • Mamba2FA, absent from the list in the previous quarter, took fourth place with 3.9K detections. 

Activity by cyber criminal groups 

  1. Storm1747: 37,274  
  1. TA569: 4,054 
  1. TA558: 231 
  1. Storm1575: 21 
  1. APT36: 18 

Key observations regarding APT activity in Q4 2025: 

  • Storm1747’s dominance continued with a 51% rise in activity, likely tied to phishing infrastructure evolution targeting finance across EU/NA regions. 
  • TA558‘s jumped into top ranks with +83% detections, suggesting expanded operations, possibly leveraging modular loaders for broader campaign reach. 
  • At the lower part of the list, we can see APTs’ displaying sharp 70-97% declines, likely due to the detection improvements or operational pauses. The focus shifted to more opportunistic actors. 

Top Protectors and Packers 

Top protectors and packers Q4 2025
  1. UPX: 12,576  
  1. NetReactor: 4,300  
  1. Themida: 3,244  
  1. ASPack: 1,263  
  1. Confuser: 2,204  

Top 5 most detected protectors and packers correspond with those of Q3. However, there are differences in terms of their intensity: 

  • UPX remains dominant despite an 11% drop, remaining attackers’ go-to for simple, fast obfuscation across commodity malware. 
  • NetReactor and Themida’s sharp declines (-49% and -37% respectively) signal detection improvements and attacker shift to newer .NET-focused protectors.  
  • Confuser kept its fifth place with a 48% growth that reflects .NET malware boom. Attackers favor it for evading static analysis in enterprise-targeted payloads. 

Conclusion 

Q4 2025 shows a stable but evolving threat landscape. Key trends include persistent stealer activity, rising RATs and backdoors, and a dynamic phishing landscape. These insights underscore the importance of continuous monitoring and proactive threat analysis to stay ahead of emerging risks. 

About ANY.RUN 

ANY.RUN develops solutions for malware analysis and threat hunting. Its interactive malware analysis sandbox is used by over 500,000 cybersecurity professionals worldwide. It enables detailed investigation of threats targeting Windows, Android, and Linux systems with hands-on analysis and instant visualization of malware behavior. 

ANY.RUN’s threat intelligence solutions, including Threat Intelligence Lookup and Threat Intelligence Feeds, allow teams to quickly identify indicators of compromise, enrich alerts, and investigate incidents early on. As a result, analysts gain actionable insights, uncover hidden threats, and improve overall cybersecurity posture. 

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The post Malware Trends Q4 2025: Inside ANY.RUN’s Latest Threat Landscape Report  appeared first on ANY.RUN’s Cybersecurity Blog.

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Laughter in the dark: Tales of absurdity from the cyber frontline and what they taught us

From a quintuple-encryption ransomware attack to zany dark web schemes and AI fails, Sophos X-Ops looks back at some of our favorite weirdest incidents from the last few years – and the serious lessons behind them

Categories: Threat Research

Tags: Ransomware, Hive, Lockbit, BlackCat, LLM, AI, Money Laundering

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A brush with online fraud: What are brushing scams and how do I stay safe?

Have you ever received a package you never ordered? It could be a warning sign that your data has been compromised, with more fraud to follow.

WeLiveSecurity – ​Read More

RTO Scam Wave Continues: A Surge in Browser-Based e-Challan Phishing and Shared Fraud Infrastructure

E-Chalan

Following our earlier reporting on RTO-themed threats, CRIL observed a renewed phishing wave abusing the e-Challan ecosystem to conduct financial fraud. Unlike earlier Android malware-driven campaigns, this activity relies entirely on browser-based phishing, significantly lowering the barrier for victim compromise. During the course of this research, CRIL also noted that similar fake e-Challan scams have been highlighted by mainstream media outlets, including Hindustan Times, underscoring the broader scale and real-world impact of these campaigns on Indian users.

The campaign primarily targets Indian vehicle owners via unsolicited SMS messages claiming an overdue traffic fine. The message includes a deceptive URL resembling an official e-Challan domain. Once accessed, victims are presented with a cloned portal that mirrors the branding and structure of the legitimate government service. At the time of this writing, many of the associated phishing domains were active at the time, indicating that this is an ongoing and operational campaign rather than isolated or short-lived activity.

The same hosting IP was observed serving multiple phishing lures impersonating government services, logistics companies, and financial institutions, indicating a shared phishing backend supporting multi-sector fraud operations.

The infection chain, outlined in Figure 1, showcases the stages of the attack.

Figure 1: Campaign Overview

Scam
Figure 1: Campaign Overview

Key Takeaways

  • Attackers are actively exploiting RTO/e-Challan themes, which remain highly effective against Indian users.
  • The phishing portal dynamically fabricates challan data, requiring no prior victim-specific information.
  • The payment workflow is deliberately restricted to credit/debit cards, avoiding traceable UPI or net banking rails.
  • Infrastructure analysis links this campaign to BFSI and logistics-themed phishing hosted on the same IP.
  • Browser-based warnings (e.g., Microsoft Defender) are present but frequently ignored due to urgency cues.

A sense of urgency, evidenced in this campaign, is usually a sign of deception. By demanding a user’s immediate attention, the intent is to make a potential victim rush their task and not perform due diligence.

Users must accordingly exercise caution, scrutinize the domain, sender, and never trust any unsolicited link(s).

Technical findings

Stage 1: Phishing SMS Delivery

The attack we first identified started with victims receiving an SMS stating that a traffic violation fine is overdue and must be paid immediately to avoid legal action. The message includes:

  • Threatening language (legal steps, supplementary charges)
  • A shortened or deceptive URL mimicking e-Challan branding
  • No personalization, allowing large-scale delivery

The sender appears as a standard mobile number, which increases delivery success and reduces immediate suspicion. (see Figure 2)

Figure 2: Fraudulent traffic violation SMS delivering a malicious e-Challan payment link

Scam
Figure 2: Fraudulent traffic violation SMS delivering a malicious e-Challan payment link

Stage 2: Redirect to Fraudulent e-Challan Portal

Clicking the embedded URL redirects the user to a phishing domain hosted on 101[.]33[.]78[.]145.

The page content is originally authored in Spanish and translated to English via browser prompts, suggesting the reuse of phishing templates across regions. (see Figure 3)

Figure 3: Fake e-Challan landing page
Figure 3: Fake e-Challan landing page

The Government insignia, MoRTH references, and NIC branding are visually replicated. (see Figure 3)

Stage 3: Fabricated Challan Generation

The portal prompts the user to enter:

  • Vehicle Number
  • Challan Number
  • Driving License Number

Regardless of the input provided, the system returns:

  • A valid-looking challan record
  • A modest fine amount (e.g., INR 590)
  • A near-term expiration date
  • Prominent warnings about license suspension, court summons, and legal proceedings

This step is purely psychological validation, designed to convince victims that the challan is legitimate. (see Figure 4)

Figure 4: Fraudulent e-Challan record generated
Figure 4: Fraudulent e-Challan record generated

Stage 4: Card Data Harvesting

Upon clicking “Pay Now”, victims are redirected to a payment page claiming secure processing via an Indian bank. However:

  • Only credit/debit cards are accepted
  • No redirection to an official payment gateway occurs
  • CVV, expiry date, and cardholder name are collected directly

During testing, the page accepted repeated card submissions, indicating that all entered card data is transmitted to the attacker backend, independent of transaction success. (see Figure 5)

Figure 5: E-Challan payment page restricted to card-only transactions
Figure 5: E-Challan payment page restricted to card-only transactions

Infrastructure Correlation and Campaign Expansion

CRIL identified another attacker-controlled IP, 43[.]130[.]12[.]41, hosting multiple domains impersonating India’s e-Challan and Parivahan services. Several of these domains follow similar naming patterns and closely resemble legitimate Parivahan branding, including domains designed to look like Parivahan variants (e.g., parizvaihen[.]icu). Analysis indicates that this infrastructure supports rotating, automatically generated phishing domains, suggesting the use of domain generation techniques to evade takedowns and blocklists.

Figure 6: Secondary phishing infrastructure supporting fake e-Challan portals
Figure 6: Secondary phishing infrastructure supporting fake e-Challan portals

The phishing pages hosted on this IP replicate the same operational flow observed in the primary campaign, displaying fabricated traffic violations with fixed fine amounts, enforcing urgency through expiration dates, and redirecting victims to fake payment pages that harvest full card details while falsely claiming to be backed by the State Bank of India.

This overlap in infrastructure, page structure, and social engineering themes suggests a broader, scalable phishing ecosystem that actively exploits government transport services to target Indian users.

Further investigation into IP address 101[.]33[.]78[.]145 revealed more than 36 phishing domains impersonating e-Challan services, all hosted on the same infrastructure.

The infrastructure also hosted phishing pages targeting:

  • BFSI (e.g., HSBC-themed payment lures)
  • Logistics companies (DTDC, Delhivery) (see Figures 7,8)

Figure 7: DTDC-themed phishing page impersonating a failed delivery notification
Figure 7: DTDC-themed phishing page impersonating a failed delivery notification

Figure 8: Fake DTDC address update page used for data harvesting
Figure 8: Fake DTDC address update page used for data harvesting

Consistent UI patterns and payment-harvesting logic across campaigns

This confirms the presence of a shared phishing infrastructure supporting multiple fraud verticals.

SMS Origin and Phone Number Analysis

As part of the continued investigation, CRIL analyzed the originating phone number used to deliver the phishing e-Challan SMS. A reverse phone number lookup confirmed that the number is registered in India and operates on the Reliance Jio Infocomm Limited mobile network, indicating the use of a locally issued mobile connection rather than an international SMS gateway.

Additionally, analysis of the number showed that it is linked to a State Bank of India (SBI) account, further reinforcing the campaign’s use of localized infrastructure. The combination of an Indian telecom carrier and association with a prominent public-sector bank likely enhances the perceived legitimacy of the scam. It increases the effectiveness of government-themed phishing messages. (see Figure 9)

Figure 9: Phone number intelligence linked to the e-Challan phishing campaign
Figure 9: Phone number intelligence linked to the e-Challan phishing campaign

Conclusion

This campaign demonstrates that RTO-themed phishing remains a high-impact fraud vector in India, particularly when combined with realistic UI cloning and psychological urgency. The reuse of infrastructure across government, logistics, and BFSI lures highlights a professionalized phishing operation rather than isolated scams.

As attackers continue shifting from malware delivery to direct financial fraud, user awareness alone is insufficient. Infrastructure monitoring, domain takedowns, and proactive SMS phishing detection are critical to disrupting these operations at scale.

Our Recommendations:

  • Always verify traffic fines directly via official government portals, not SMS links.
  • Organizations should monitor for lookalike domains abusing government and brand identities.
  • SOC teams should track shared phishing infrastructure, as takedown of one domain may disrupt multiple campaigns.
  • Telecom providers should strengthen SMS filtering for financial and government-themed lures.
  • Financial institutions should monitor for card-not-present fraud patterns linked to phishing campaigns.

MITRE ATT&CK® Techniques

Tactic Technique ID Technique Name
Initial Access T1566.001 Phishing: Spearphishing via SMS
Credential Access T1056 Input Capture
Collection T1119 Automated Collection
Exfiltration T1041 Exfiltration Over C2 Channel
Impact T1657 Financial Theft

Indicators of Compromise (IOCs)

The IOCs have been added to this GitHub repository. Please review and integrate them into your Threat Intelligence feed to enhance protection and improve your overall security posture.

Indicators Indicator Type Description
echala[.]vip echallaxzov[.]vip Domain Phishing Domain
echallaxzrx[.]vip
echallaxzm[.]vip
echallaxzv[.]vip
echallaxzx[.]vip
echallx[.]vip
echalln[.]vip
echallv[.]vip
delhirzexu[.]vip
delhirzexi[.]vip
delhizery[.]vip
delhisery[.]vip
dtdcspostb[.]vip
dtdcspostv[.]vip
dtdcspostc[.]vip
hsbc-vnd[.]cc
hsbc-vns[.]cc
parisvaihen[.]icu
parizvaihen[.]icu
parvaihacn[.]icu
101[.]33[.]78[.]145 IP Malicious IP
43[.]130[.]12[.]41

The post RTO Scam Wave Continues: A Surge in Browser-Based e-Challan Phishing and Shared Fraud Infrastructure appeared first on Cyble.

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The Week in Vulnerabilities: More Than 2,000 New Flaws Emerge 

ICS and IT vulnerabilities

Cyble Vulnerability Intelligence researchers tracked 2,415 vulnerabilities in the last week, a significant increase over even last week’s very high number of new vulnerabilities. The increase signals a heightened risk landscape and expanding attack surface in the current threat environment. 

Over 300 of the disclosed vulnerabilities already have a publicly available Proof-of-Concept (PoC), significantly increasing the likelihood of real-world attacks. 

A total of 219 vulnerabilities were rated as critical under the CVSS v3.1 scoring system, while 47 received a critical severity rating based on the newer CVSS v4.0 scoring system.  

Even after factoring out a high number of Linux kernel and Adobe vulnerabilities (chart below), new vulnerabilities reported in the last week were still very high. 

What follows are some of the IT and ICS vulnerabilities flagged by Cyble threat intelligence researchers in recent reports to clients spanning December 9-16. 

The Week’s Top IT Vulnerabilities 

CVE-2025-59385 is a high-severity authentication bypass vulnerability affecting several versions of QNAP operating systems, including QTS and QuTS hero. Fixed versions include QTS 5.2.7.3297 build 20251024 and later, QuTS hero h5.2.7.3297 build 20251024 and later, and QuTS hero h5.3.1.3292 build 20251024 and later. 

CVE-2025-66430 is a critical vulnerability in Plesk 18.0, specifically affecting the Password-Protected Directories feature. It stems from improper access control, potentially allowing attackers to bypass security mechanisms and escalate privileges to root-level access on affected Plesk for Linux servers. 

CVE-2025-64537 is a critical DOM-based Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) vulnerability affecting Adobe Experience Manager. The vulnerability could allow attackers to inject malicious scripts into web pages, which are then executed in the context of a victim’s browser, potentially leading to session hijacking, data theft, or further exploitation. 

CVE-2025-43529 is a critical use-after-free vulnerability in Apple’s WebKit browser engine, which is used in Safari and other Apple applications. The flaw could allow attackers to execute arbitrary code on affected devices by tricking users into processing maliciously crafted web content, potentially leading to full device compromise. CISA has added the vulnerability to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog. 

CVE-2025-59718 is a critical authentication bypass vulnerability affecting multiple versions of Fortinet products, including FortiOS, FortiProxy, FortiSwitchManager, and FortiWeb. The flaw could allow unauthenticated attackers to bypass FortiCloud Single Sign-On (SSO) login authentication by sending a specially crafted SAML message. The vulnerability has been added to CISA’s KEV catalog. 

Notable vulnerabilities discussed in open-source communities included CVE-2025-55182, a critical unauthenticated remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability affecting React Server Components; CVE-2025-14174, a critical memory corruption vulnerability affecting Apple’s WebKit browser engine; and CVE-2025-62221, a high-severity use-after-free elevation of privilege vulnerability in the Windows Cloud Files Mini Filter Driver. 

Vulnerabilities Discussed on the Dark Web 

Cyble Research and Intelligence Labs (CRIL) researchers also observed several threat actors discussing weaponizing vulnerabilities on dark web forums. Among the vulnerabilities under discussion were: 

CVE-2025-55315, a critical severity vulnerability classified as HTTP request/response smuggling due to inconsistent interpretation of HTTP requests in ASP.NET Core, particularly in the Kestrel server component. The flaw arises from how chunk extensions in Transfer-Encoding: chunked requests with invalid line endings are handled differently by ASP.NET Core compared to upstream proxies, enabling attackers to smuggle malicious requests. An authorized attacker can exploit this vulnerability over a network to bypass security controls, leading to impacts such as privilege escalation, SSRF, CSRF bypass, session hijacking, or code execution, depending on the application logic. 

CVE-2025-59287 is a critical-severity remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability stemming from improper deserialization of untrusted data in Microsoft Windows Server Update Services (WSUS). The core flaw occurs in the ClientWebService component, where a specially crafted SOAP request to endpoints like SyncUpdates triggers decryption and unsafe deserialization of an AuthorizationCookie object using .NET’s BinaryFormatter, allowing arbitrary code execution with SYSTEM privileges. Unauthenticated remote attackers can exploit this over WSUS ports (e.g., 8530/8531) to deploy webshells or achieve persistence, with real-world exploitation already observed. 

CVE-2025-59719, a critical severity vulnerability due to improper cryptographic signature verification, permitting authentication bypass in Fortinet FortiWeb through FortiCloud SSO. Attackers can submit crafted SAML response messages to evade login checks without proper authentication. This unauthenticated flaw has a high impact and has been actively exploited post-disclosure. 

ICS Vulnerabilities 

Cyble also flagged two industrial control system (ICS) vulnerabilities as meriting high-priority attention by security teams. They include: 

CVE-2024-3596: multiple versions of Hitachi Energy AFS, AFR, and AFF Series products are affected by a RADIUS Protocol vulnerability, Improper Enforcement of Message Integrity During Transmission in a Communication Channel. Successful exploitation of the vulnerability could compromise the integrity of the product data and disrupt its availability. 

CVE-2025-13970: OpenPLC_V3 versions prior to pull request #310 are vulnerable to this Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) flaw. Successful exploitation of the vulnerability could result in the alteration of PLC settings or the upload of malicious programs. 

Conclusion 

The record number of new vulnerabilities observed by Cyble in the last week underscores the need for security teams to respond with rapid, well-targeted actions to patch the most critical vulnerabilities and successfully defend IT and critical infrastructure. A risk-based vulnerability management program should be at the heart of those defensive efforts. 

Other cybersecurity best practices that can help guard against a wide range of threats include segmentation of critical assets; removing or protecting web-facing assets; Zero-Trust access principles; ransomware-resistant backups; hardened endpoints, infrastructure, and configurations; network, endpoint, and cloud monitoring; and well-rehearsed incident response plans. 

Cyble’s comprehensive attack surface management solutions can help by scanning network and cloud assets for exposures and prioritizing fixes, in addition to monitoring for leaked credentials and other early warning signs of major cyberattacks

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