Josephine Wolff on Why Healthcare Must Scrutinize Cyber and AI Coverage Healthcare organizations face growing pressure to reassess cyber insurance policies as cyberattacks disrupt patient care and AI tools introduce new liability risks. Josephine Wolff of Tufts University discusses how exclusions, compliance demands and AI-related uncertainty shape insurance decisions.
Frame's AI Models Build Contextualized Security Lessons Automatically in Minutes Frame Security, founded by former Wiz product and sales leader Tal Shlomo, emerged from stealth with $50 million to build AI-generated cyber training and simulations designed to prepare employees for phishing, deepfakes, voice cloning and other personalized social engineering attacks.
Agency Grants Routers a 18-Month Reprieve From Obsolesce The U.S. Federal Communications Commission extended through Jan. 1, 2029, a waiver allowing foreign-made routers already approved for use in the United States to continue receiving updates. The agency earlier this year instituted a ban on foreign-made consumer routers, citing national security concerns.
Kernel Privilege Escalation Has One Linux Maintainer Contemplating a 'Kill Switch' Back-to-back kernel vulnerabilities in Linux has defenders scrambling to apply defenses in the age of quick turnaround time for hackers to exploit nascent flaws. "Dirty Frag" and "Copy Fail" kernel privilege escalation vulnerabilities became public knowledge within two weeks of each other.
In the face of relentless cyberattacks that threaten patient safety, hospitals must strengthen their resilience, with clinical continuity, secure backups and coordinated recovery emerging as critical strategies, said John Riggi of the American Hospital Association and Josh Howell of Rubrik.
German Financial Regulator Warns Sector to Step Up Defenses OpenAI is stepping up to do what arch-rival Anthropic still won't. The AI firm will give European authorities and companies access to its new vulnerability-finding AI model, so they can beef up their cybersecurity.
Josephine Wolff on Why Healthcare Must Scrutinize Cyber and AI Coverage Healthcare organizations face growing pressure to reassess cyber insurance policies as cyberattacks disrupt patient care and AI tools introduce new liability risks. Josephine Wolff of Tufts University discusses how exclusions, compliance demands and AI-related uncertainty shape insurance decisions.
Agency Grants Routers a 18-Month Reprieve From Obsolesce The U.S. Federal Communications Commission extended through Jan. 1, 2029, a waiver allowing foreign-made routers already approved for use in the United States to continue receiving updates. The agency earlier this year instituted a ban on foreign-made consumer routers, citing national security concerns.
Kernel Privilege Escalation Has One Linux Maintainer Contemplating a 'Kill Switch' Back-to-back kernel vulnerabilities in Linux has defenders scrambling to apply defenses in the age of quick turnaround time for hackers to exploit nascent flaws. "Dirty Frag" and "Copy Fail" kernel privilege escalation vulnerabilities became public knowledge within two weeks of each other.
Our research examines the April 22 Checkmarx KICS and April 24 elementary-data incidents as part of a broader TeamPCP supply chain campaign. Across both cases, the actor abused trusted CI/CD and release workflows to steal credentials at scale.