惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Cloudbric
Cloudbric
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
L
LangChain Blog
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
Project Zero
Project Zero
Latest news
Latest news
S
Schneier on Security
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
C
Check Point Blog
IT之家
IT之家
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
G
Google Developers Blog
T
Tor Project blog
T
Threatpost
D
DataBreaches.Net
博客园 - 【当耐特】
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
Vercel News
Vercel News
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
C
Cisco Blogs
博客园_首页
S
Securelist
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
量子位
U
Unit 42
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
S
Security Affairs
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
P
Proofpoint News Feed
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志

Latest from TechRadar in Pro

VodafoneThree gets Ofcom approval to bring satellite connectivity to your smartphone Is this the tipping point for AI at work? New Gallup survey finds half of all US employees now use it in some way 'Every Apple user needs to know about this nasty scam': Fake warnings tell users their iCloud data will be… 'Makes it even more disappointing': Microsoft backs fossil fuel big time with $7 billion deal in race for AI… 'Maybe it’s not science fiction': Solar panels are causing rainwater to fall in one of the driest places… Maine becomes first US state to pass data centre construction ban Dozens of WordPress plugins hijacked to target thousands of sites Drone-killing laser weapons greenlit for use in US airspace – FAA and Defense Department say high-energy weapons are ‘ready to protect all air travelers from illicit drone use’ despite airspace restrictions and friendly-fire incidents 'We are currently being extorted' — crypto giant Kraken says it is facing extortion attack, here's… I tried 7 free MTD software – now I've ranked my top picks as a freelancer Jackery McGraw Hill becomes latest to see its Salesforce data hacked Looking for a new PC? Now might be great time to upgrade, as Gartner figures claim shipments are rising — while… The new engineering playbook: how AI design copilots are reshaping product development Farewell Surface Hub — Microsoft kills off its super-sized touchscreen displays, but you might still be able to get one if you act fast 'We have no interest in patient data in the UK': Palantir UK head defends record as criticisms rise Amazon’s new AI Bio Discovery tool can provide ‘every researcher’ with ‘lab-in-the-loop drug discovery’ – 40+ AI biology models can filter 300,000 novel antibody candidates down to the top results for testing in just weeks Over 100 Chrome Web Store extensions found stealing user data from thousands of accounts Europe wants tech sovereignty but is this realistic? Enterprise AI governance cannot live in a prompt. So where is the safety net? Why 2026 is the year of flexibility without friction: solving the multi-platform crisis OpenAI reveals its Mythos rival designed for cybersecurity pros When cyberattacks are inevitable, recovery becomes the strategy Closing the cloud complexity gap LaLiga uses AI to fight illegal streaming that costs its clubs $800m a year Intel and Google expand long-term chip partnership to power AI systems 'Chatbots respond not just to what you ask, but how you ask it': Report finds AI agents might be sucking up to… 'Smartphones have physical limitations': Report explains why AI is kickstarting a billion-dollar hardware arms… 'I’m pretty sure actually we really do not need to work for five days' Zoom CEO calls for end of traditional work schedules — says 3-day working week should become the norm 'It's more common than you think': Experts reveal how hackers are trying to hijack your inbox with these… 'This wasn’t just phishing — it was a full-service cybercrime platform': FBI reveals takedown of notorious W3LL phishing operation targeting thousands of victims From cloud to Agentic AI: Why security must evolve faster than innovation Basic-Fit gym group data breach exposes details of over 1 million members — here's what we know ‘Authorities can ask them to hand over data’: Report claims over 80% of Europeans don’t trust US and Chinese businesses to handle their data – Europe is desperate for homegrown AI, cloud, and telecoms as the rift with the US grows Booking.com confirms reservation data breach — tells customers hackers 'may have been able to access certain… Agility is the key to protecting against Malware-as-a-Service (MaaS) Rockstar hackers publish 78.6 million stolen records — but many of us will be disappointed Adobe issues emergency security patch — Reader and Acrobat users need to update now OpenAI flags third-party data issue — all macOS users should update now Linux rules on using AI-generated code - Copilot is OK, but humans must take 'full responsibility for the… Hackers use Claude and ChatGPT in 'a significant evolution in offensive capability' to breach government agencies, leak hundreds of millions of citizen records ‘You’re effed’: Palantir CEO says AI ‘will destroy humanities jobs’ – but Gen Z workers are apparently deliberately sabotaging AI rollouts in an effort to fight back 'This is not your typical run-of-the-mill malware': CPUID download page hacked and tools replaced with links… Anthropic is bringing Claude's AI power to Microsoft Word How businesses can turn AI pilots into scalable solutions AI can transform customer experiences – when it lives up to its promise 'Regain control of our digital destiny': France to ditch Windows for Linux to reduce reliance on US tech How the memory crisis is strangling the UK's data center boom ‘No Decision’ is the new breach: Why inaction is becoming a career risk for CISOs in 2026 'That shouldn’t translate into investing in AI blindly, without a clear strategy': Experts warn UK firms want to keep spending big on AI - even if they can't prove it makes a difference How AI is rewriting the ERP investment playbook Rockstar confirms major third-party data breach: GTA VI maker says 'no impact on our organization or our… How to deploy physical AI effectively '71% of US households get routers from ISPs': Why new FCC rules could leave millions stuck with outdated,… 'The CPU is the system’s executive layer': Intel joins SambaNova as both face existential threat from… 'Just not sustainable': Why your monthly £25 broadband internet bill could soon hit £45 '$15K bill destroyed a solo developer’s startup': How hackers are using leaked Google API keys to… 'Today is the day you've been waiting for': eGPUs can now officially turn a humble Mac Mini into an AI… Linux pulls support for ancient CPU — unsurprisingly, Linus Torvald says there is 'zero real reason' to… 'AI is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity': Amazon CEO Andy Jassy lays out his '6 truths' for the… 'A self-inflicted hit': Washington state just rolled back sales tax exemptions for AI data centers worth… 'There’s no one-size-fits-all office chair': Vari explains the design decisions behind its award-winning… 'Small business owners have significant creative control from start to finish' — VistaPrint reveals the… 'Experts' to rent for $1 per month: Hostinger debuts 7-person AI team to help SMBs save thousands on… Microsoft hands Linux Foundation key Surface data to help fix laptop battery life Adobe Reader users beware — experts flag months-old security flaw using booby-trapped PDFs to scope out victims 'Shockingly good value': New rugged Android tablet has a built-in 1080p projector, night-vision camera, and… Stop the presses — Microsoft is actually cutting cloud PC prices for SMBs, promises to make it 'more cost-effective for small and medium businesses' 'If one piece of your supply chain is delayed, then your whole project can't deliver': Nearly half of US data centers planned for 2026 canceled or delayed — and things could soon get much worse ChatGPT’s hidden backup model just got smarter — as OpenAI adds a cheaper Pro option 'The problem is not AI’s capability...what won’t improve on its own is the human side': Major study claims white-collar workers are fighting back against AI in the workplace Introducing Perspectives — the new home for premium contributed content on TechRadar Pro Introducing Perspectives — the new home for premium contributed content on TechRadar Pro The New Internet is Coming Lazarus and Kimsuky prove why infrastructure-level analysis is crucial for cybersecurity Claude Cowork is now available for enterprise use, adds analytics, access controls and more The internet has a trust problem - identity needs to travel OpenAI halts £31 billion Stargate UK project over rising energy costs and regulatory deadlock The 70% rule: Why your AI strategy is a people strategy Top WordPress Slider plugin hijacked to spread malware — here's what to look out for Why CIOs need a single source of truth for digital operations No, Elon Musk doesn't want to give you a $5,000 tax refund — it's a scam, here's what to look out… Intermedia Unite review 2026 Why enterprise AI will be defined by integration, not model aggregation ‘It’s a potential national security threat’: Proton study finds over 3,500 US legislators’ official emails leaked and exposed on the dark web Microsoft warns worrying security flaw exposed over 50 million Android users, says 'user credentials and financial… Google Chrome rolls out a new tool to try and stop infostealer malware in its tracks How to submit an article for TechRadar Pro Perspectives 'Orwellian Notion': Federal workers can access Claude AI again after judge ditches Trump's Anthropic ban 'Almost 100 TOPS': GMKTec debuts powerful AI Mini PC that supports three 8K screens and costs less than you… 'Remember BlackBerry?': Iconic phone maker’s patents used to hit Brother in a massive lawsuit that could… Breach exposes sensitive LAPD files stored in city attorney system ‘FlamingChina’ hacker claims to have stolen over 10 petabytes of advanced military data from China’s National Supercomputing Center in possibly the biggest hack of all time Mac users beware — experts say this attack 'stood out immediately' by making a major change to try… Could AMD's former foundry be quietly building up to become a major Arm — and AMD — rival? Now that's different - hackers use miniature SVG images to try and hide credit card stealer "A future-proof powerhouse for demanding tasks": MSI's RTX5090 creative laptop gets a $300 price cut… Closing the implementation gap in America's cyber strategy UK NHS chief champions Palantir’s 'outstanding results’ in England, pushes for deeper rollout despite… French email provider accidentally leaked 40 million records — L’Oreal, Renault, French government data…
Why decades-old attacks still work, and why that should worry you
Brian Turner · 2026-06-05 · via Latest from TechRadar in Pro

For all the attention given to advanced threats and AI-driven attacks, many successful breaches still rely on techniques that have been around for decades.

SQL injection has been studied and discussed for more than 20 years, yet more than 20% of organizations are still vulnerable when first assessed, and the technique continues to account for a meaningful share of modern vulnerabilities.

VP of Product at Wallarm.

Cross-site scripting (XSS) is another long-standing example. It allows attackers to inject malicious scripts into web applications, enabling data theft, session hijacking, and unauthorized actions on behalf of legitimate users.

The technique has persisted since the late 1990s and continues to appear in modern applications, including those built on frameworks that claim to mitigate it by default.

If the industry has spent so much time addressing decades-old attacks, why do they still succeed? The answer has less to do with awareness and more to do with how modern technology environments are built and maintained.

Technology doesn’t replace itself

Technology does not replace itself in clean cycles. New systems layer on top of existing ones, and older code remains in place because it continues to support business operations. Over time, this produces environments that are more complex and harder to fully secure.

Organizations continue to build APIs, adopt microservices, and integrate AI tools into their systems. These changes support growth and improve functionality, but they also increase exposure.

Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!

Each new layer introduces additional connections, dependencies, and potential points of failure. Older vulnerabilities are rarely removed in the process. They are inherited.

That is why long-standing attack techniques remain effective. Attackers do not need sophisticated methods when simpler ones still work.

Gaps in ownership create real risk

There is also a disconnect between how security responsibilities are perceived and how they are executed. Developers expect security controls to catch issues later in the pipeline. Security teams assume secure coding practices are already in place. Both assumptions create gaps.

APIs illustrate the problem clearly. Some are developed internally, others integrated from third parties. Application security teams focus on internally developed assets, while vulnerability management teams often treat APIs as outside their scope.

The result is that some APIs are never fully assessed or consistently monitored, and known vulnerability classes persist in them long after the industry considers those classes solved.

The AI attack surface is mostly old problems in new packaging

Most of the conversation about AI security focuses on model-specific risks: prompt injection, jailbreaks, training data poisoning, and model theft. Those risks are real and worth addressing. They are also a small portion of the actual attack surface that an AI deployment introduces.

A production AI system is a distributed application.

It includes inference APIs that accept user input and return model output, retrieval pipelines that pull from vector databases and traditional data stores, agent frameworks that call external tools and services, identity and authorization layers that gate access to capabilities, and a supply chain of models, libraries, and datasets sourced from third parties.

Each of these components is built from architectural patterns that predate generative AI by years or decades.

That means the AI attack surface exposes the same vulnerability classes practitioners have been fighting all along. Inference endpoints are APIs, and they inherit the same authentication, authorization, rate limiting, and input validation problems that the rest of the API ecosystem has.

Retrieval-augmented generation pipelines query databases, which means SQL injection and access control failures still apply. Agent tools execute requests against internal and external systems, which reintroduces server-side request forgery and command injection in new contexts.

Supply chain risk in model registries and dependency packages mirrors the risk in any other software supply chain.

Teams that focus exclusively on novel AI-specific threats leave the larger and more familiar surface unprotected. An attacker does not need to craft a clever prompt injection if the inference API has broken object-level authorization or a misconfigured CORS policy. The path of least resistance still runs through the basics.

This is also where the pace problem compounds. AI features ship under aggressive timelines, and the API surface expands faster than security teams can assess it. Each new endpoint inherits the organization’s existing API security posture, including whatever gaps already exist.

Security is a business decision

Setting security priorities requires translating technical vulnerabilities into business impact. A SQL injection finding is widely understood as a class, but its significance depends on what data it exposes and how it can be reached. Without that context, prioritization defaults to whatever is loudest, which is usually whatever is newest.

That is how organizations end up overestimating their protection against basic threats. They have tools that address known vulnerabilities at the perimeter or in code review, but coverage breaks down at the edges, particularly in APIs and AI components that do not map cleanly to traditional application security models.

Old risks don’t go away

Fixing this does not require new approaches. Established security practices still work. The difficulty is applying them consistently across an environment that keeps growing and reshaping itself, and ensuring that older vulnerability classes are not deprioritized when new technologies are introduced.

Three actions matter most. Define ownership for every API and AI component, internal or third-party, so no asset falls between teams. Test AI deployments using existing application and API security disciplines before adding AI-specific tooling on top.

And measure exposure based on what is reachable and exploitable, not on whether a vulnerability class is considered new or old.

The continued success of decades-old attacks is not a knowledge gap. It is a prioritization gap. Security teams that balance attention between novel threats and unresolved fundamentals will reduce exposure more effectively than those chasing whichever risk is currently in the headlines.

We've featured the best endpoint protection software.

This article was produced as part of TechRadar Pro Perspectives, our channel to feature the best and brightest minds in the technology industry today.

The views expressed here are those of the author and are not necessarily those of TechRadarPro or Future plc. If you are interested in contributing find out more here: https://www.techradar.com/pro/perspectives-how-to-submit

Brian has over 30 years publishing experience as a writer and editor across a range of computing, technology, and marketing titles. He has been interviewed multiple times for the BBC and been a speaker at international conferences. His specialty on techradar is Software as a Service (SaaS) applications, covering everything from office suites to IT service tools. He is also a science fiction and fantasy author, published as Brian G Turner.