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Phantom Squatting Uses AI-Hallucinated Domains for Phishing and Malware

Phantom Squatting Uses AI-Hallucinated Domains for Phishing and Malware

Large language models keep inventing web addresses that do not exist. Attackers have started buying those made-up domains before anyone else can, then hosting phishing pages on them to catch traffic that AI tools point their way. Palo Alto Networks' Unit 42 calls the trick phantom squatting , and its new research shows it is already happening in the wild. The reason it matters is trust. Developers and AI assistants increasingly treat the links a model hands back as real. When a model invents a domain that does not exist yet, whoever registers it first inherits all of that misplaced trust, with no phishing email and no malicious ad required. To measure the problem, Unit 42 asked two AI models 685,339 questions about 913 well-known brands across technology, finance, healthcare, government, gambling, and other sectors. The models produced 2.1 million links. Threat intelligence already flagged 13,229 of them as outright malicious, meaning the AI was handing out known-ba...

Jul 01, 2026
2
Anthropic Restores Claude Fable 5 After U.S. Lifts Jailbreak-Linked Export Controls

Anthropic Restores Claude Fable 5 After U.S. Lifts Jailbreak-Linked Export Controls

Anthropic is putting Claude Fable 5 back online worldwide. On  June 30 , the U.S. Commerce Department lifted the export controls it had imposed on Fable and its more tightly controlled sibling Mythos 5 about two and a half weeks earlier. Fable 5 returns to users on Wednesday, July 1, across Claude.ai, the Claude Platform, Claude Code, and Claude Cowork. Export controls restrict who can receive or use a technology. The  June 12 order  told Anthropic to cut off both models for any foreign national, inside or outside the United States, including its own non-citizen staff. The rule took effect at once, and the company had no reliable way to check every user's nationality in real time, so it shut both models down for everyone. The trigger was a jailbreak: a prompt that gets a model to bypass its safety rules. Amazon researchers found one in Fable 5. By Anthropic's account, the prompt got the model to flag a few software flaws and, in one case, to write code showing h...

Jul 01, 2026
4
Azure CLI Password Spray Hits at Least 78 Microsoft Accounts in 81M+ Attempts

Azure CLI Password Spray Hits at Least 78 Microsoft Accounts in 81M+ Attempts

Cybersecurity researchers have warned of a "massive, ongoing, automated password spray attack" aimed at Microsoft's Azure command-line interface (CLI), compromising dozens of accounts in the process. The activity, per Huntress , originates from an IPv6 address range ( 2a0a:d683::/32 ) controlled by internet infrastructure provider LSHIY LLC (AS32167). "Between June 12 and June 26, the threat actor behind it made more than 81 million login attempts and successfully compromised at least 78 Microsoft accounts across 64 organizations," the company said in a statement. "The targeting of these attacks seems to be based entirely on password prevalence on compromised password combo lists, and is not specific to business type or industry." What makes the password spray attack noteworthy is not only the scale, but also the fact that many of the compromised organizations had Conditional Access policies enabled. Specifically, the campaign has been found to...

Jul 01, 2026
5
Researcher Analyzes 3,000 Live ClickFix Payloads, Exposing API-Driven Malware Delivery

Researcher Analyzes 3,000 Live ClickFix Payloads, Exposing API-Driven Malware Delivery

ClickFix , the trick that fools people into running malware by hand, has quietly grown a back office. New research shows the malicious commands behind its fake "prove you're human" pages are now handed out by API-driven servers that give each visitor the same malware in a different disguise. The same research also turned up a new delivery method built to slip past Windows' script scanning. Security researcher Bert-Jan Pals took apart several ClickFix platforms and analyzed roughly 3,000 payloads from live campaigns. He presented the findings at  OrangeCon  in early June and  published the details  on June 30. ClickFix is simple by design. A booby-trapped page shows a fake CAPTCHA or error, hidden JavaScript drops a command into your clipboard, and the page tells you to press a key combo, paste, and hit Enter. You run the malware yourself. There's usually no exploit at the first step and often no file for traditional antivirus to flag, so conventional emai...

Jul 01, 2026
6
Citrix Patches Six NetScaler Flaws Allowing File Read and Denial-of-Service

Citrix Patches Six NetScaler Flaws Allowing File Read and Denial-of-Service

Citrix on Tuesday released security updates to address multiple flaws in NetScaler ADC (formerly Citrix ADC) and NetScaler Gateway (formerly Citrix Gateway) that could be exploited by an attacker to facilitate arbitrary file reads or trigger a denial-of-service (DoS) condition. The vulnerabilities are listed below - CVE-2026-8451 (CVSS score: 8.8) - An insufficient input validation vulnerability leading to memory overread when NetScaler ADC or NetScaler Gateway is configured as a SAML IDP CVE-2026-8452 (CVSS score: 8.8) - A memory overflow vulnerability leading to unpredictable or erroneous behavior and denial-of-service when the appliance is configured as a Gateway or an AAA virtual server CVE-2026-8655 (CVSS score: 8.8) - Multiple memory overflow vulnerabilities leading to unpredictable or erroneous behavior and denial-of-service when NetScaler ADC is configured as an LB of type Oracle, a DNS Proxy, or a DNS recursive resolver deployment CVE-2026-10816 (CVSS sco...

Jul 01, 2026
8
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
9
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
10
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