Unprotected Session Tokens Can Undermine FIDO2 Security

While the protocol has made passwordless authentication a reality, token-binding is key to prevent against token theft and reuse, security vendor says.

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Lawmakers’ Section 230 ultimatum to Big Tech: Work together to make the internet safer, or else

A bipartisan bill seeks to end the Section 230 liability shield for tech companies. Here’s a timeline of what happens next.

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As the FBI Closes In, Scattered Spider Attacks Finance, Insurance Orgs

Scattered Spider is as active as ever, despite authorities claiming that they’re close to nailing its members.

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A Cost-Effective Encryption Strategy Starts With Key Management

Key management is more complex than ever. Your choices are: Rely on your cloud provider or manage keys locally; Encrypt only the most critical data; Or encrypt everything.

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Patch Tuesday, May 2024 Edition

Microsoft today released updates to fix more than 60 security holes in Windows computers and supported software, including two “zero-day” vulnerabilities in Windows that are already being exploited in active attacks. There are also important security patches available for macOS and Adobe users, and for the Chrome Web browser, which just patched its own zero-day flaw.

First, the zero-days. CVE-2024-30051 is an “elevation of privilege” bug in a core Windows library. Satnam Narang at Tenable said this flaw is being used as part of post-compromise activity to elevate privileges as a local attacker.

“CVE-2024-30051 is used to gain initial access into a target environment and requires the use of social engineering tactics via email, social media or instant messaging to convince a target to open a specially crafted document file,” Narang said. “Once exploited, the attacker can bypass OLE mitigations in Microsoft 365 and Microsoft Office, which are security features designed to protect end users from malicious files.”

CVE-2024-30040 is a security feature bypass in MSHTML, a component that is deeply tied to the default Web browser on Windows systems. Microsoft’s advisory on this flaw is fairly sparse, but Kevin Breen from Immersive Labs said this vulnerability also affects Office 365 and Microsoft Office applications.

“Very little information is provided and the short description is painfully obtuse,” Breen said of Microsoft’s advisory on CVE-2024-30040.

Meanwhile, Kaspersky Lab, one of two companies credited with reporting exploitation of CVE-2024-30040 to Microsoft, has published a fascinating writeup on how they discovered the exploit in a file shared with Virustotal.com.

Kaspersky said it has since seen the exploit used together with QakBot and other malware. Emerging in 2007 as a banking trojan, QakBot (a.k.a. Qbot and Pinkslipbot) has morphed into an advanced malware strain now used by multiple cybercriminal groups to prepare newly compromised networks for ransomware infestations.

The only vulnerability fixed this month that earned Microsoft’s most-dire “critical” rating is CVE-2024-30044, a flaw in Sharepoint that Microsoft said is likely to be exploited. Tenable’s Narang notes that exploitation of this bug requires an attacker to be authenticated to a vulnerable SharePoint Server with Site Owner permissions (or higher) first and to take additional steps in order to exploit this flaw, which makes this flaw less likely to be widely exploited as most attackers follow the path of least resistance.

Five days ago, Google released a security update for Chrome that fixes a zero-day in the popular browser. Chrome usually auto-downloads any available updates, but it still may require a complete restart of the browser to install them. If you use Chrome and see a “Relaunch to update” message in the upper right corner of the browser, it’s time to restart.

Apple has just shipped macOS Sonoma 14.5 update, which includes nearly two dozen security patches. To ensure your Mac is up-to-date, go to System Settings, General tab, then Software Update and follow any prompts.

Finally, Adobe has critical security patches available for a range of products, including Acrobat, Reader, Illustrator, Adobe Substance 3D Painter, Adobe Aero, Adobe Animate and Adobe Framemaker.

Regardless of whether you use a Mac or Windows system (or something else), it’s always a good idea to backup your data and or system before applying any security updates. For a closer look at the individual fixes released by Microsoft today, check out the complete list over at the SANS Internet Storm Center. Anyone in charge of maintaining Windows systems in an enterprise environment should keep an eye on askwoody.com, which usually has the scoop on any wonky Windows patches.

Krebs on Security – ​Read More

Meet Hackbat: An open-source, more powerful Flipper Zero alternative

Hackbat has everything you need to carry out high-end penetration testing duties. Here’s how to get your hands on one.

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Microsoft Warns of Active Zero-Day Exploitation, Patches 60 Windows Vulnerabilities

Patch Tuesday: Microsoft documents 60 security flaws in multiple software products and flags an actively exploited Windows zero-day for urgent attention.

The post Microsoft Warns of Active Zero-Day Exploitation, Patches 60 Windows Vulnerabilities appeared first on SecurityWeek.

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NHS Digital Hints at Exploit Sightings of Arcserve UDP Vulnerabilities

The UK’s National Health Service (NHS) is warning of possible exploitation attempts targeting vulnerabilities in the Arcserve Unified Data Protection (UDP) software, which were disclosed in March and had PoC exploit code released shortly after.

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Vermont Passes Data Privacy Law Allowing Consumers to Sue Companies

Vermont has passed one of the strongest comprehensive data privacy laws in the country, which includes a provision allowing individuals to sue companies for violating their privacy rights.

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Apple Backports Fix for Zero-Day Exploited in Attacks to Older iPhones

The flaw is a memory corruption issue in Apple’s RTKit real-time operating system that enables attackers with arbitrary kernel read and write capability to bypass kernel memory protections.

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