Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

How Attackers Use AI To Spread Malware On GitHub

Github Copilot became the subject of critical security concerns, mainly because of jailbreak vulnerabilities that allow attackers to modify the tool’s behavior. Two attack vectors – Affirmation Jailbreak and Proxy Hijack – lead to malicious code generation and unauthorized access to premium AI models. But that’s not all. Contents hide 1 Jailbreaking GitHub Copilot 1.1 Affirmation jailbreak? “Sure,” let’s exploit the AI system(s) 2 Proxy Hijack.

Compliance without Complexity

Governments across the globe have introduced new legislation to address the escalating risks of cybersecurity threats. In 2021, the United States issued executive order 14028, requiring government agencies to develop a plan for implementing a zero-trust security strategy. This included rolling out multi-factor authentication (MFA), data encryption, and ensuring employees have secure access to the data and applications they need on their devices according to the principle of least privilege access.

Indusface Achieves PCI DSS v4.0.1 Certification

We are excited to announce that Indusface has successfully achieved PCI DSS v4.0.1 certification as a service provider, reinforcing our commitment to industry-leading security and compliance. This milestone underscores our dedication to protecting sensitive cardholder data and helping businesses navigate evolving security regulations.

How AppTrana WAAP Supports PCI DSS v4.0.1 Compliance

PCI DSS (Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard) v4.0.1 is designed to protect cardholder data and secure payment environments. Compliance with PCI DSS is critical for any organization that stores, processes, or transmits payment card information. The framework helps prevent fraud, data breaches, and financial losses associated with cyber threats targeting payment systems.

CVE-2024-4577 - PHP-CGI RCE Exploitation in Windows Servers

A newly identified cyber campaign has been actively targeting organizations across multiple sectors in Japan since January 2025. Threat actors of unknown origin have been exploiting CVE-2024-4577, a critical remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability in the PHP-CGI implementation of PHP on Windows, to gain unauthorized access to victim systems. This campaign has primarily impacted Japan’s technology, telecommunications, and e-commerce industries.

Online Anonymity Explained: 10 Tools for Anonymous Browsing

Is true anonymity possible online? As more companies and governments threaten our online privacy, people are looking for more ways to browse the internet with increased privacy or total anonymity. We will therefore explore why people are choosing to browse the web anonymously, why it’s important, and popular tools to browse the web with increased privacy or total anonymity.

Agentic AI: Why Cyber Defenders Finally Have the Upper Hand

My two previous recent postings on AI covered “Agentic AI” and how that impacts cybersecurity and the eventual emergence of malicious agentic AI malware. Both of those articles started to touch on the idea of automated agentic AI defenses. This posting goes into a little more detail on what agentic AI defenses might mean. It starts with agentic AI, which is a collection of automated programs (i.e., bots or agents) working toward a common goal.

The Cybersecurity Confidence Gap: Are Your Employees as Secure as They Think?

Our recent research reveals a concerning discrepancy between employees' confidence in their ability to identify social engineering attempts and their actual vulnerability to these attacks. While 86% of respondents believe they can confidently identify phishing emails, nearly half have fallen for scams in the past. This disconnect between perceived competence and demonstrated vulnerability, the "confidence gap", poses a substantial risk to organizations. The Danger of Overconfidence.

Booking.com Phishing Scam Targets Employees in the Hospitality Sector

A phishing campaign is impersonating travel agency Booking.com to target employees in the hospitality industry, according to researchers at Microsoft. The attacks use a social engineering technique called “ClickFix” to trick victims into downloading malware.