Acer is working to patch two maximum-severity zero-days in its Wave 7 mesh routers, a reminder that firmware bugs in home networking gear can become high-value attack paths.
A dispute over publicly disclosed Microsoft vulnerabilities shows how fast security research can slide from technical reporting into a contest over disclosure control, response windows, and legal pressure.
Microsoft’s latest warning is less about a single flaw than about the dangerous timing of disclosure, where a few lost days can force defenders into emergency mode.
A conference season warning and a vendor’s bold security claims point to the same problem: autonomous software is beginning to test the limits of identity, authorization, and defensive response.
Exploited flaws in two Defender-related components could let an attacker climb to SYSTEM or knock protection offline, underscoring how endpoint security software can become part of the attack surface.
The contest payout is a headline number, but the real signal is where skilled researchers still found fresh cracks in fully patched software.
May 2026 brings an unusual patch cycle with no known actively exploited zero-days, but the real story is how AI-assisted vulnerability research is changing the pace and pressure of defense.
Generative AI may be helping adversaries discover vulnerabilities and assist in zero-day exploit development, but the sharper concern is how much it can compress human attack workflows.
Critical flaw in Ivanti’s Endpoint Manager Mobile exploited in the wild as company scrambles to patch multiple high-severity vulnerabilities.
Next-generation AI is enabling hackers to find and exploit vulnerabilities at machine speed-can defenders keep up?
As artificial intelligence accelerates the hunt for software flaws, governments and businesses face a new era of relentless cyber threats.
Three critical flaws in Microsoft Defender are being actively exploited, with two still awaiting official patches.
Anthropic’s Project Glasswing arms defenders with an AI that’s already outsmarting human security experts-and exposing just how vulnerable our digital world truly is.
Anthropic’s new AI can autonomously discover and weaponize decades-old vulnerabilities, forcing defenders and attackers alike to rethink the future of cyber warfare.
The world’s most advanced AI has found vulnerabilities across critical systems, but its unchecked power raises new security fears.
Anthropic withholds its most advanced AI, entrusting it to tech giants to uncover software flaws before cybercriminals do.
Ruthless attackers exploited zero-day flaws in Ivanti’s mobile management platform, seizing control and exfiltrating sensitive data in a matter of seconds.
Two critical vulnerabilities in Chrome’s engine are under active attack, prompting urgent action from security officials.
Two critical, actively exploited vulnerabilities in Ivanti’s mobile management system are giving cybercriminals unfettered access to enterprise networks worldwide.