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GitHub 'Verified' Commits Can Be Rewritten Into New Hashes Without Breaking Signatures

GitHub 'Verified' Commits Can Be Rewritten Into New Hashes Without Breaking Signatures

New research shows that a signed Git commit's hash is not the one-of-a-kind name that much of the software world assumes it to be. Given any signed commit, someone without the signing key can mint a second commit with the same files, author, and date, and a valid signature, GitHub still stamps "Verified." Everything a reviewer would check matches. The commit's hash does not. That matters because so many systems treat a verified commit hash as a permanent, unique name for its contents. Here is the concrete failure: block a bad commit by its hash, and an attacker can re-push the same content under a fresh, still-"Verified" hash your blocklist has never seen. Deduplication, provenance logs, and reproducible-build records that key on the hash inherit the same soft spot. A compromised or hostile mirror can hand cloners validly signed commits whose hashes differ from those on the canonical forge. What this is not is a way to slip different code past a sig...

Jul 08, 2026
3
The Verification Step Is the New ATO Battleground in 2026

The Verification Step Is the New ATO Battleground in 2026

For years, account takeover (ATO) followed a predictable script. Attackers bought stolen credentials in bulk, ran them through automated tools, and waited for matches. Credential stuffing was cheap, scalable, and for defenders, relatively well understood. That era is ending. Not because attackers gave up, but because the front door finally got harder to kick in. Passkeys are now mainstream. According to the FIDO Alliance's 2026 research, 75% of global consumers have enabled a passkey on at least one account. At the same time, passkeys are becoming more common in the workplace, with 68% of companies now using, testing, or introducing them for employee sign-ins.  Phishing-resistant, passwordless authentication is no longer aspirational, it's becoming the default. When the password disappears, so does the value of a stolen password. So where does the attack go next? It moves downstream, to the moments where systems still trust a human to prove who they are. The attac...

Jul 08, 2026
4
GitHub Copilot Refuses Harmful Requests in Chat, Then Writes Them in Code

GitHub Copilot Refuses Harmful Requests in Chat, Then Writes Them in Code

An AI coding assistant that refuses to answer a dangerous request in its chat box can answer it anyway if the same request is broken into small, ordinary-looking steps inside a code editor. That is the finding of a  new study of GitHub Copilot  by researchers Abhishek Kumar and Carsten Maple. The models they tested through Copilot, Claude from Anthropic, and Gemini from Google, refused almost every harmful request when asked directly. Reframed as steps in a normal coding task, they produced the harmful answers in all 816 of the study's workflow runs. What makes this different from a typical jailbreak: no one asks for the harmful thing directly, and the model is not tricked into running someone else's code. It writes the banned content itself, as a side effect of a coding task it was told to improve. How it works The researchers call the method workflow-level jailbreak construction . Instead of a single blunt prompt, they asked Copilot to build an everyday piece of s...

Jul 08, 2026
5
China-Linked UAT-7810 Expands ORB Network With New LONGLEASH Malware

China-Linked UAT-7810 Expands ORB Network With New LONGLEASH Malware

A Chinese threat actor tracked as UAT-7810 is actively refining its bespoke malware to expand its Operational Relay Box (ORB) network by breaking into internet-facing networking devices. According to findings from Cisco Talos, UAT-7810 is an advanced persistent threat (APT) actor that's responsible for maintaining and proliferating LapDogs , an ORB network that first came to light in June 2025. "UAT-7810 is most likely tasked with establishing Operational Relay Box (ORB) networks that can then be leveraged by associated secondary threat actors to conduct their own malicious attacks against high value targets," researchers Jungsoo An, Asheer Malhotra, Vanja Svajcer, and Brandon White said . One such China-nexus threat actor that has leveraged the infrastructure in its own attacks is UAT-5918 , which has been linked to cyber attacks targeting critical infrastructure entities in Taiwan since at least 2023 with an aim to establish persistent access within victim envir...

Jul 08, 2026
6
15-Year-Old GhostLock Flaw Enables Root and Container Escape on Most Linux Distros

15-Year-Old GhostLock Flaw Enables Root and Container Escape on Most Linux Distros

Researchers at  Nebula Security  have disclosed GhostLock ( CVE-2026-43499 ), a 15-year-old Linux kernel flaw that lets any logged-in user take full root control of a machine that has not been patched. The vulnerable code has shipped by default in essentially every mainstream distribution since 2011. The flaw needs no special permission, no unusual settings, and no network access; ordinary threading calls from any local program are enough. Nebula turned it into a working root exploit that is 97% reliable in its testing and also escapes containers, and says Google awarded the team $92,337 through its  kernelCTF  bug-bounty program. No one is known to be exploiting it in the wild, but Nebula has published  working exploit code , so anyone can now run it. Patching is the priority. How the bug works The kernel has a system for keeping an urgent task from getting stuck behind a trivial one. Part of it is a cleanup step that tidies up after a task...

Jul 08, 2026
8
CISA Adds 4 Actively Exploited Adobe, Joomla, and Langflow Flaws to KEV

CISA Adds 4 Actively Exploited Adobe, Joomla, and Langflow Flaws to KEV

The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) on Tuesday added four security flaws to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities ( KEV ) catalog, citing evidence of active exploitation. The vulnerabilities are listed below - CVE-2026-48282 (CVSS score: 10.0) - A path traversal vulnerability in Adobe ColdFusion that could lead to arbitrary code execution in the context of the current user. CVE-2026-56290 (CVSS score: 10.0) - An improper access control vulnerability in Joomlack Page Builder that could allow for remote code execution via unauthenticated arbitrary file upload. CVE-2026-55255 (CVSS score: 6.1) - An authorization bypass through a user-controlled key vulnerability in Langflow that could allow an authenticated attacker to execute any flow belonging to another user by specifying the victim's flow ID in the request. CVE-2026-48908 (CVSS score: 10.0) - An unrestricted upload of a file with a dangerous type vulnerability in JoomShaper SP P...

Jul 08, 2026
9
RedWing MaaS Packages Android Bank Fraud as a Telegram Rental Service

RedWing MaaS Packages Android Bank Fraud as a Telegram Rental Service

A new Android malware operation called RedWing is being rented out on Telegram as a ready-made bank-fraud service. It lets even low-skill criminals take over a victim's phone, steal their banking logins, and capture the one-time codes that protect their accounts. Zimperium's zLabs , which found the operation, says it looks like a new variant of Oblivion , a $300-a-month rent-a-malware tool documented earlier this year. RedWing is sold as a complete product, in subscription tiers with referral discounts, guides, and how-to videos, so a buyer needs no malware-writing skill. A Telegram bot builds each buyer a custom app on demand. Researchers say a substantial number of the resulting droppers and payloads currently evade conventional security tools. Infection starts with a phishing link that opens a fake app-store page. The kit's dropper builder can mimic Google Play, the Galaxy Store, and AppGallery, or build fully custom pages, complete with fake ratings, reviews, ...

Jul 07, 2026
10
Rogue Agent Flaw Could Have Let Attackers Hijack Google Dialogflow CX Chatbots

Rogue Agent Flaw Could Have Let Attackers Hijack Google Dialogflow CX Chatbots

A critical flaw in Google's Dialogflow CX could have let an attacker with edit rights on one Code Block-enabled agent compromise other Code Block-enabled agents in the same Google Cloud project. From there, they could read live conversations, steal the data users shared, and make the bots send attacker-written messages, including requests to re-enter a password. Security firm Varonis found it and named it Rogue Agent. The flaw affected only organizations that built agents with Dialogflow's Playbooks and custom Code Blocks, which let developers add their own Python. And it was not a remote, unauthenticated attack. Pulling it off needed the dialogflow.playbooks.update permission on one such agent, which limits the realistic attacker to a malicious insider or a compromised developer account, not a stranger on the internet. From that one foothold, though, the reach extended to every agent in the project. Google has fixed it, and both Varonis and Google say there is no sig...

Jul 07, 2026