Threatsday Bulletin: Rootkit Patch, Federal Breach, OnePlus SMS Leak, TikTok Scandal & More

/* ===== Container ===== */ .td-wrap /* ===== Section ===== */ .td-section .td-title margin: 16px 0 4px; font-size: 32px; line-height: 1.2; font-weight: 800; .td-subtitle margin: 0 0 24px; color: #64748b; font-size: 16px; /* ===== Timeline ===== */ .td-timeline position: relative; margin: 0 !important;padding: 0!important; list-style: none; /* spine */ .td-timeline:before

Welcome to this week’s Threatsday Bulletin—your Thursday check-in on the latest twists and turns in cybersecurity and hacking.

The digital threat landscape never stands still. One week it’s a critical zero-day, the next it’s a wave of phishing lures or a state-backed disinformation push. Each headline is a reminder that the rules keep changing and that defenders—whether you’re protecting a global enterprise or your own personal data—need to keep moving just as fast.

In this edition we unpack fresh exploits, high-profile arrests, and the newest tactics cybercriminals are testing right now. Grab a coffee, take five minutes, and get the key insights that help you stay a step ahead of the next breach.

That wraps up this week’s Threatsday Bulletin. Use these stories as a prompt to double-check your own defenses: apply the urgent updates, tighten access controls, and talk with colleagues about what these incidents mean for your environment.

Every small action today helps prevent a big incident tomorrow.

👉 Stay in the loop: Sign up for our newsletter for real-time updates and next week’s highlights.

Found this article interesting? Follow us on Google News, Twitter and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post.

 The Hacker News 

Total
0
Shares
Previous Post

Salesforce Patches Critical ForcedLeak Bug Exposing CRM Data via AI Prompt Injection

Next Post

Urgent: Cisco ASA Zero-Day Duo Under Attack; CISA Triggers Emergency Mitigation Directive

Related Posts

New Report Links Research Firms BIETA and CIII to China’s MSS Cyber Operations

A Chinese company named the Beijing Institute of Electronics Technology and Application (BIETA) has been assessed to be likely led by the Ministry of State Security (MSS). The assessment comes from evidence that at least four BIETA personnel have clear or possible links to MSS officers and their relationship with the University of International Relations, which is known to share links with the
Read More