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CERT-UA Impersonation Campaign Spread AGEWHEEZE Malware to 1 Million Emails

1 April 2026 at 16:10
The Computer Emergency Response Team of Ukraine (CERT-UA) has disclosed details of a new phishing campaign in which the cybersecurity agency itself was impersonated to distribute a remote administration tool known as AGEWHEEZE. As part of the attacks, the threat actors, tracked as UAC-0255, sent emails on March 26 and 27, 2026, posing as CERT-UA to distribute a password-protected ZIP archive

r/netsec monthly discussion & tool thread

Questions regarding netsec and discussion related directly to netsec are welcome here, as is sharing tool links.

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  • All discussions and questions should directly relate to netsec.
  • No tech support is to be requested or provided on r/netsec.

As always, the content & discussion guidelines should also be observed on r/netsec.

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Feedback and suggestions are welcome, but don't post it here. Please send it to the moderator inbox.

submitted by /u/albinowax
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AI-Generated Calendar Event Phishing w/ Dynamic Landing Pages

It’s crazy how things come full circle more than a decade later.

About a decade ago, I got interested in calendar phishing after seeing Beau Bullock’s work at BHIS. Around that time, I built and shared some of my own Graph API scripts for calendar phishing, added support for it in my open source PhishAPI tool, and even introduced the idea to KnowBe4 so they could eventually bring it into phishing training for clients (which Kevin Mitnick himself used Beau's command-line tool to demonstrate).

I brought it to their attention at a client’s request after using the technique successfully on them, during a time when calendar phishing was still largely overlooked as a real-world attack path.

Back then, it was still niche enough that plenty of defenders were not thinking about calendar invites as a phishing channel at all.

More than a decade later, I’m still refining the concept, now as part of the commercial PhishU Framework.

I’m happy to say the Framework fully supports Calendar Event phishing again, but now in a much more usable way:

Β· Native calendar event workflow
Β· Simple WYSIWYG w/ AI-generated timing suggestions and content
Β· As easy as selecting the Calendar Event template
Β· Automatically tied into training when used in a campaign

It’s built for red teams and security teams that want realistic phishing assessments, including credential and session capture paths, not just allow-list-only email testing.

submitted by /u/IndySecMan
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Block the Prompt, Not the Work: The End of "Doctor No"

1 April 2026 at 12:46
There is a character that keeps appearing in enterprise security departments, and most CISOs know exactly who that is. It doesn’t build. It doesn’t enable. Its entire function is to say "No." No to ChatGPT. No to DeepSeek. No to the file-sharing tool the product team swears by. For years, this looked like security. But in 2026, "Doctor No" is no longer just a management headache &

Casbaneiro Phishing Targets Latin America and Europe Using Dynamic PDF Lures

1 April 2026 at 12:36
A multi-pronged phishing campaign is targeting Spanish-speaking users in organizations across Latin America and Europe to deliver Windows banking trojans like Casbaneiro (aka Metamorfo) via another malware called Horabot. The activity has been attributed to a Brazilian cybercrime threat actor tracked as Augmented Marauder and Water Saci. The e-crime group was first documented by Trend Micro in

Microsoft Warns of WhatsApp-Delivered VBS Malware Hijacking Windows via UAC Bypass

1 April 2026 at 11:49
Microsoft is calling attention to a new campaign that has leveraged WhatsApp messages to distribute malicious Visual Basic Script (VBS) files. The activity, beginning in late February 2026, leverages these scripts to initiate a multi-stage infection chain for establishing persistence and enabling remote access. It's currently not known what lures the threat actors use to trick users into

New Chrome Zero-Day CVE-2026-5281 Under Active Exploitation β€” Patch Released

1 April 2026 at 11:42
Google on Thursday released security updates for its Chrome web browser to address 21 vulnerabilities, including a zero-day flaw that it said has been exploited in the wild. The high-severity vulnerability, CVE-2026-5281 (CVSS score: N/A), concerns a use-after-free bug in Dawn, an open-source and cross-platform implementation of the WebGPU standard. "Use-after-free in Dawn in Google Chrome prior

3 Reasons Attackers Are Using Your Trusted Tools Against You (And Why You Don’t See It Coming)

1 April 2026 at 10:58
For years, cybersecurity has followed a familiar model: block malware, stop the attack. Now, attackers are moving on to what’s next. Threat actors now use malware less frequently in favor of what’s already inside your environment, including abusing trusted tools, native binaries, and legitimate admin utilities to move laterally, escalate privileges, and persist without raising alarms. Most

Authority Encoding Risk (AER)

Most AI discussions focus on correctness.

Accuracy. Alignment. Output quality.

But there’s a more fundamental problem underneath all of that:

Who β€” or what β€” is actually allowed to execute a decision?

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I just published a paper introducing:

Authority Encoding Risk (AER)

A measurable variable for something most systems don’t track at all:

Authority ambiguity at the moment of execution.

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Today’s systems can tell you:

β€’ if something is likely correct

β€’ if it follows policy

β€’ if it appears safe

But they cannot reliably answer:

Is this decision admissible under real-world authority constraints?

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That gap shows up in:

β€’ automation systems

β€’ AI-assisted decisions

β€’ institutional workflows

β€’ underwriting and loss modeling

And right now, it’s largely invisible.

---

The paper breaks down:

β€’ how authority ambiguity propagates into risk

β€’ why existing frameworks fail to capture it

β€’ how it can be measured before loss occurs

---

If you’re working anywhere near AI, risk, infrastructure, or decision systems β€” this is a layer worth paying attention to.

---

There’s a category of risk most AI systems don’t even know exists.

This paper represents an initial formulation.

Ongoing work is focused on tightening definitions, expanding evidence, and strengthening the model.

https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract\_id=6229278

submitted by /u/Dramatic-Ebb-7165
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Google Attributes Axios npm Supply Chain Attack to North Korean Group UNC1069

1 April 2026 at 07:44
Google has formally attributed the supply chain compromise of the popular Axios npm package to a financially motivated North Korean threat activity cluster tracked as UNC1069. "We have attributed the attack to a suspected North Korean threat actor we track as UNC1069," John Hultquist, chief analyst at Google Threat Intelligence Group (GTIG), told The Hacker News in a statement. "North Korean

Claude Code Source Leaked via npm Packaging Error, Anthropic Confirms

1 April 2026 at 06:12
Anthropic on Tuesday confirmed that internal code for its popular artificial intelligence (AI) coding assistant, Claude Code, had been inadvertently released due to a human error. "No sensitive customer data or credentials were involved or exposed," an Anthropic spokesperson said in a statement shared with CNBC News. "This was a release packaging issue caused by human error, not a security

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