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1
Microsoft Warns Poisoned MCP Tool Descriptions Can Make AI Agents Leak Data

Microsoft Warns Poisoned MCP Tool Descriptions Can Make AI Agents Leak Data

New Microsoft research shows how attackers can hijack AI agents that act on a user's behalf, using nothing more than a poisoned tool description to make the agent quietly hand over company data to an outsider. The trick is that the agent never breaks a rule. Every step looks routine, so in a default setup no alarm may fire. The work comes from Microsoft Incident Response and its Defender security research team, and it lands as companies start letting AI do more than read and summarize. What changes when an agent can act Until recently, the workplace AI risk was mostly framed around what a model read and wrote. A poisoned document could skew an answer, and that was mostly where it ended. Agents are different. Microsoft 365 Copilot can send email, create files, and change calendars. Custom agents built in Copilot Studio or Azure AI Foundry can reach into business systems and run multi-step jobs on their own. The same injection trick that biases a summary now trigger...

Jun 30, 2026
3
RustDuck Botnet Rebuilds in Rust to Hijack Routers and Servers for DDoS

RustDuck Botnet Rebuilds in Rust to Hijack Routers and Servers for DDoS

A new two-stage malware family called RustDuck is hijacking home routers, IP cameras, Android boxes, and poorly secured servers, then stitching them into a network built to knock websites and online services offline. Researchers at QiAnXin's XLab have tracked it since February 2026, and say the real story is not how big it is today, but how fast it is changing. The end goal is a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack: flooding a target with junk traffic from the infected machines until it buckles. RustDuck is one more entrant in a crowded field, but it stands out for two reasons. It is being rewritten from the C programming language into Rust, and its newer versions go to unusual lengths to avoid being studied or shut down. How it spreads RustDuck does not lean on a single clever trick. It sprays a mix of old, well-known weaknesses and hopes one sticks. The first is the oldest in the book: devices left on the internet with weak or default passwords on their rem...

Jun 30, 2026
4
Langflow RCE Exploited to Deploy Monero Miner on Exposed AI App Endpoints

Langflow RCE Exploited to Deploy Monero Miner on Exposed AI App Endpoints

Threat actors are continuing to exploit a critical Langflow vulnerability as part of fresh attacks designed to deliver a Monero cryptocurrency miner. The activity has been found to weaponize CVE-2026-33017 (CVSS score: 9.3), an unauthenticated remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability in Langflow, indicating threat actors are scanning and targeting exposed artificial intelligence (AI) application endpoints for obtaining initial access to enterprise networks. The attack was observed over a 19-day window between March 27 and April 15, 2026. "In this campaign, a single line of Python code evaluated inside an unauthenticated Langflow API endpoint pulls down a shell script, fetches a miner binary, and launches it detached," Trend Micro researchers Simon Dulude and John Zhang said in a technical report published last week. At a high level, the malware is designed to terminate competing cryptocurrency miner processes associated with Kinsing , WatchDog , Rocke , and Outlaw ,...

Jun 30, 2026
5
Silent Swap Crypto Clipper Uses Fake Google Notes Extension to Replace Wallet Addresses

Silent Swap Crypto Clipper Uses Fake Google Notes Extension to Replace Wallet Addresses

Cybersecurity researchers have flagged an active browser extension campaign that is designed to steal cryptocurrency by stealthily replacing wallet addresses when unsuspecting users initiate a transaction. The cryptocurrency clipper activity has been codenamed Silent Swap by McAfee Labs. "The campaign is delivered through unsigned installers – observed in both .NET and Golang variants – that deploy a malicious Chromium extension masquerading as a benign 'Google Notes' utility," the cybersecurity company said in a technical report shared with The Hacker News. The unsigned .NET installer, named BaseZipInstaller, is designed to retrieve a ZIP archive, which serves as a foundation for the malicious browser extension by scanning the system for Chromium-based browsers. For each detected profile in those browsers, it forcibly terminates the browser process and injects the extension by modifying the Secure Preferences and Preferences files. The end goal of the ex...

Jun 30, 2026
6
GuardFall Exposes Open-Source AI Coding Agents to Decades-Old Shell Injection Risks

GuardFall Exposes Open-Source AI Coding Agents to Decades-Old Shell Injection Risks

The safety check that is supposed to stop an AI coding agent from running a dangerous command can be walked straight past using a shell trick that has been public for decades. New research from  Adversa AI , which is named the bypass GuardFall , found it works against ten of the eleven popular open-source coding and computer-use agents the firm tested. Only one, "Continue," was built to defend against it. Why does it matter? These agents run shell commands with your full account access. Point one at a booby-trapped repository or software package, and a hidden instruction can quietly run a command that wipes files or steals the secrets your account can reach, from SSH keys and cloud credentials to anything sitting in your home folder. How does it get past the guard? Most of these agents try to stay safe by checking each command against a blocklist of dangerous patterns before running it. The flaw is that they check the command as plain text, while bash rewrites that t...

Jun 30, 2026
8
282 iOS AI Apps Leak API Keys and Open AI Proxy Access in Network Traffic Study

282 iOS AI Apps Leak API Keys and Open AI Proxy Access in Network Traffic Study

Researchers tested 444 AI chatbot apps for iPhone and found that 282 of them, nearly two-thirds, exposed paid AI access through their network traffic. In many cases, the path in was visible just by watching what the app sent: a plaintext API key, a reusable token, or a backend server that accepted requests with no key at all. Whoever grabs it can send model requests on the developer's account, and the developer pays the bill. Three months after the researchers warned the developers, only 28% had fixed it. The work, from researchers at Wake Forest University, is the  first in-depth study of the problem on iOS . It is striking partly because of how little effort the snooping took. The team used a tool they built, LLMKeyLens , that watches an app's traffic and pulls out the credentials as they go by. No jailbreaking, no cracking the app open. The key is the secret that lets the app call a service like OpenAI or Google Gemini. Embed it in the app, and it is exposed with ev...

Jun 30, 2026
9
What the Numbers Say About FIFA 2026 Cyber Risk

What the Numbers Say About FIFA 2026 Cyber Risk

The FIFA World Cup 2026 opened on June 11. By that date, according to Check Point Research, the fraud infrastructure targeting it had already been built, staged, and partially deployed. Threat actor activity was pre-planned, months out, across three sectors and at least ten languages. Check Point Exposure Management published the FIFA World Cup 2026 Cyber Threat Report this month, covering financial services, transportation, hospitality, and gambling. Here are three findings worth reading carefully. 1 in 3 FIFA Partners Can't Block Email Impersonation Pre-tournament research by Proofpoint found that more than one-third of official FIFA World Cup 2026 partners lack sufficient DMARC enforcement to prevent domain spoofing. That means attackers can send an email that appears to come from a sponsor, a vendor, or a logistics partner, with no technical barrier stopping it. The World Cup supply chain is enormous. Airlines, hotels, broadcast partners, merchandise contractors, an...

Jun 30, 2026
10
Attackers Exploit SimpleHelp CVE-2026-48558 to Deploy TaskWeaver and Djinn Stealer

Attackers Exploit SimpleHelp CVE-2026-48558 to Deploy TaskWeaver and Djinn Stealer

An unknown threat actor has been observed exploiting a recently disclosed maximum-severity security flaw in SimpleHelp to deliver two previously unreported malware families, TaskWeaver and Djinn Stealer . The intrusion involves the exploitation of CVE-2026-48558 (CVSS score: 10.0), a critical authentication bypass vulnerability impacting the OpenID Connect (OIDC) flow that an unauthenticated attacker could exploit to obtain a fully authenticated "Technician session by submitting a forged token containing arbitrary identity claims. "TaskWeaver is a heavily obfuscated Node.js loader, delivered as jquery.js and executed through node.exe, that implements an encrypted, reusable payload delivery channel rather than a fixed set of post exploitation commands," Blackpoint Cyber said in an analysis. "The observed second stage payload, Djinn Stealer, targets Windows, macOS, and Linux systems." Djinn Stealer is designed to harvest credentials associated with cloud...

Jun 30, 2026