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Sysdig Blog

Masterclass: AI is more than ChatGPT and LLMs CVE-2026-39987 update: How attackers weaponized marimo to deploy a blockchain botnet via HuggingFace Kubernetes 1.36 - New security features 5 steps to securing AI workloads Marimo OSS Python Notebook RCE: From Disclosure to Exploitation in Under 10 Hours Security briefing: March 2026 The Sysdig MCP server is now available in AWS Marketplace Risk isn’t reduced until you take action: How teams resolve issues in the cloud AI infrastructure security: Why it deserves its own category Three pillars for building effective runtime-powered cloud defense, the right way Closing the cloud security gap with runtime security Seeing risk isn’t stopping it: Why visibility alone isn’t enough TeamPCP expands: Supply chain compromise spreads from Trivy to Checkmarx GitHub Actions AI coding agents are running on your machines — Do you know what they're doing? Runtime security for AI coding agents: Protecting AI-assisted development How runtime insights power every cloud security use case CVE-2026-33017: How attackers compromised Langflow AI pipelines in 20 hours Inline Cloud Response: Accelerating AWS threat containment for SOC teams Runtime malware detection for AWS Fargate Detecting CVE-2026-3288 & CVE-2026-24512: Ingress-nginx configuration injection vulnerabilities for Kubernetes Malware detection with Sysdig Security briefing: February 2026 Leveling up Kubernetes Posture: From baselines to risk-aware admission Eliminating runtime blind spots: How CleanStart and Sysdig build continuous trust across the container lifecycle LLMjacking: From Emerging Threat to Black Market Reality Real risks live at runtime: Why CISOs must care about deep telemetry in 2026 Sysdig named a Leader in the Forrester Wave™: Cloud Native Application Protection Solutions, Q1 2026 How to run rootless containers AI-assisted cloud intrusion achieves admin access in 8 minutes Security briefing: January 2026 Securing GPU-accelerated AI workloads in Oracle Kubernetes Engine Bringing OSS runtime security to AWS: Falco integration with AWS Security Hub CSPM Our customers have spoken: Sysdig rated a Strong Performer in Gartner® Voice of the Customer for Cloud-Native Application Protection Platforms Protecting sensitive business data in preparation for the organization's Gen AI VoidLink threat analysis: Sysdig discovers C2-compiled kernel rootkits AI is still a workload: A practical guide to securing AI workloads How threat actors are using self-hosted GitHub Actions runners as backdoors How Sysdig Sage delivers AI-powered, real-world vulnerability management Security briefing: December 2025 Top 10 ways to get breached in 2026 EtherRAT dissected: How a React2Shell implant delivers 5 payloads through blockchain C2 Introducing runtime file integrity monitoring and response with Sysdig FIM How to detect multi-stage attacks with runtime behavioral analytics EtherRAT: DPRK uses novel Ethereum implant in React2Shell attacks Detecting React2Shell: The maximum-severity RCE vulnerability affecting React Server Components and Next.js The rise of AI agents: How autonomous AI Is transforming cloud security Kubernetes 1.35 - New security features The Urgency of Securing AI Workloads for CISOs Quantum and the cloud: Science fiction turned security strategy Cloud security, the right way: What the industry should demand (and why "good enough" isn't) Return of the Shai-Hulud worm affects over 25,000 GitHub repositories Detecting CVE-2024-1086: The decade-old Linux kernel vulnerability that’s being actively exploited in ransomware campaigns What’s old is new again: How to demystify AI security with AIBOMs Securing Kubernetes with agentic cloud security How agentic cloud security reduces real risks Hunting reverse shells: How the Sysdig Threat Research Team builds smarter detection rules Shifting left with AI and MCP: Sysdig + Amazon Q Developer How Falco and Stratoshark close the gap between open source runtime detection and deep forensic analysis Investigating security issues with ChatGPT and the GitHub MCP server New runc vulnerabilities allow container escape: CVE-2025-31133, CVE-2025-52565, CVE-2025-52881 Harden your LLM security with OWASP Security briefing: October 2025 How agentic AI is changing cloud security Kubernetes Incident Response: Detect, investigate, and contain in under 10 minutes Sysdig recognized as a Cloud Security Leader in Latio Tech Cloud Security Market Report AI echolocation of cloud risks using Sysdig & Snyk MCP servers Sysdig MCP Server: Bridging AI and cloud security insights Understanding CVE-2025-49844: “RediShell” Critical Remote Code Execution in Redis How Sysdig secures your containers and Kubernetes Sysdig Security Briefing: September 2025 Cloud security, the right way: The 3 pillars of real-time defense Open source spotlight: Bringing web application security to Falco with Falcoya's Nginx plugin Malicious NPM packages: Are you exposed? AI for SOC teams: 5 cloud security prompts to start your day with Sysdig Sage™ Shai-Hulud: The novel self-replicating worm infecting hundreds of NPM packages ZynorRAT technical analysis: Reverse engineering a novel, Turkish Go-based RAT Modern vulnerability management, built for the cloud Build your AWS incident response playbook with open source tools 2025 Gartner® CNAPP Market Guide: Runtime visibility is no longer optional Threat hunting with Sysdig: Uncovering “IngressNightmare” Open source spotlight: From alerts to action with AI-powered Falco Vanguard From triage to action: How Sysdig’s agentic cloud security platform slashes noise and accelerates remediation The vision comes to life: Agentic cloud security with Sysdig Sage™ Data security findings: A technical deep dive Connecting runtime to source: Sysdig and Semgrep integration Fix what matters, faster: How Sysdig and Semgrep are unifying security without silos – from code to runtime Defending sensitive data with Sysdig Secure Redefining cloud security, the right way Join the movement: The Sysdig Open Source Community is live A smarter, safer cloud in the age of AI Unifying detection and response: Sysdig + Cortex XSOAR for security at cloud speed The future of security is open, and it needs a unified hub: The Sysdig Open Source Community is here CVE-2025-53104: Command injection via GitHub Actions workflow in gluestack-ui Why MCP server security is critical for AI-driven enterprises What’s new in Sysdig — June 2025 AI-powered CNAPP with Sysdig Sage™ Revolutionizing Cybersecurity Search with Sysdig Sage™ Sysdig Threat Bulletin: Iranian Cyber Threats The end of the prioritization-only era: Vulnerability management needs action Dangerous by default: Insecure GitHub Actions found in MITRE, Splunk, and other open source repositories
Security briefing: November 2025
Crystal Morin · 2025-12-01 · via Sysdig Blog

Security briefing: November 2025

Falco Feeds extends the power of Falco by giving open source-focused companies access to expert-written rules that are continuously updated as new threats are discovered.

learn more

Green background with a circular icon on the left and three bullet points listing: Automatically detect threats, Eliminate rule maintenance, Stay compliant, with three black and white cursor arrows pointing at the text.

Look back and stay ahead

November is a month for reminiscing — looking back over the last 11 months to take stock of what’s been done in anticipation of what’s to come. This month, we’re reminded that “new” threats are not always novel; sometimes they emerge from the past, repurposed by threat actors who never stop innovating.

Nov. 5: Three container escape vulnerabilities

  • CVE-2025-3113, CVE-2025-52565, and CVE-2025-52881 affect runc, the container runtime used by many platforms like Docker and Kubernetes.
  • These vulnerabilities could allow root access to the host system after bypassing container isolation, if exploited.
  • Organizations are encouraged to update immediately, as all known versions of runc are affected by two of the vulnerabilities.
  • Sysdig’s response: A detailed blog was published on November 6 with recommended mitigations if immediate updating is not possible, and detections for Sysdig Secure customers and Falco users. A threat bulletin was also emailed to customers.

Nov. 20: Linux kernel exploitation CVE-2024-1086

  • A vulnerability present in the Linux kernel for over 10 years was discovered in January 2024 and patched the following month.
  • On October 31, 2025, CISA confirmed that it was being actively exploited in ransomware campaigns.
  • The vulnerability provides attackers with root privileges that grant them full admin control, allowing them to disable security tools and compromise additional systems.
  • Organizations are encouraged to prioritize patching their Linux infrastructure, taking care to check legacy and rarely used systems that may still be exposed.
  • Sysdig’s response: We published a technical analysis of CVE-2024-1086 and released detection rules for Sysdig Secure customers.

Nov. 24: The Shai-Hulud worm returns

  • Shai-Hulud is a worm (self-propagating malware) that was first launched on September 15, infecting approximately 200 packages and publishing victim data on GitHub.
  • A modified version of the worm quickly compromised nearly 1,000 packages, leaking tens of thousands of credentials on GitHub at the end of November.
  • Organizations are encouraged to immediately remove and replace compromised packages with clean versions, clear their NPM cache, and rotate credentials. In addition, they should conduct a threat hunt to search for newly created repositories and unauthorized changes to workflow and commit history.
  • Sysdig’s response: A public blog and threat bulletin were released the same day with detections for both versions of the worm for Sysdig Secure customers.

Additional educational resources

If there’s one thing the cybersecurity community excels at, it’s persistent improvement. The Sysdig Threat Research Team (TRT) is dedicated to the idea of a more secure world for everyone and encourages collaboration. On November 13, we published a new educational blog titled Hunting Reverse Shells: How the Sysdig Threat Research Team builds smarter detection rules.

This blog provides a glimpse into Sysdig threat research and writes new detections to help others in the industry improve their detection capabilities. With three types of reverse shells commonly used by attackers as examples, readers will learn how to continuously evolve precise and adaptable rules.

Also in the news

  • Financial sector supply chain breach: Real estate financial firm SitusAMC publicly disclosed a material incident on November 22, 10 days after the breach was identified. Financial giants like Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase, and Citi were informed that real estate loan and mortgage-related data was stolen. With an investigation fully underway, the full scope of victim impact is yet to come.
  • Personal information of 33.7 million accounts stolen: South Korea’s largest online retailer, Coupang, announced the unauthorized data access on November 30. This access is believed to have started in late June and was discovered on November 18. The South Korean government is investigating what a few sources say may have been an insider threat.
  • Microsoft zero-day dropped on Patch Tuesday: While the CVSS score may be low for CVE-2025-62215 due to exploitation complexity, this Windows Kernel vulnerability is being actively exploited, so it needs to be patched immediately. Upon winning a race condition, an attacker can elevate local privileges.
  • The Cyber Security and Resilience (CS&R) Bill: Introduced to the UK Parliament on November 12, the bill expands upon and modernizes the country’s existing NIS Regulations 2018. Similar to the EU’s NIS2 Directive, it’s meant to impose stronger cybersecurity requirements across a wider range of organizations.

Closing thoughts

As we head toward the end of the year, it remains clear that security never takes a holiday. Beyond all that was discussed here, there were several other breaches in November and a surge in botnet loaders and info-stealers.

Take a moment to be thankful for the resilience and vigilance of our security community — those who choose to defend every day.

Sysdig is thankful that our collective efforts can be so powerful. Old threats may persist, but so do the teammates who jump on incidents without hesitation, the researchers who publish their findings openly, and the engineers who patch through the night. Let’s carry that momentum forward into the new year.

Don’t wait for next month’s wrap-up! To stay ahead of emerging threats, keep a close eye on the latest insights from the Sysdig Threat Research Team.

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