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Security

Scope Systems confirms cyber incident, says no data loss occurred Instructure breach: ShinyHunters says ‘matter has been resolved’ Rapid7 launches Cyber GRC program to connect compliance with live risk data Australian federal budget 2026: The industry perspective Op-Ed: Microsoft May Patch Tuesday reveals 137 vulnerabilities Federal Budget 2026: The state of cyber security spending for the coming year OpenAI offers EU early access to its cyber security model Exclusive: Aussie firm Earth Systems listed by INC Ransom hacking group Op-Ed: Why Middle East tensions demand immediate action on OT security Aussie schools breach: Instructure boss “reaches agreement” with ShinyHunters to not release data Institute of Public Accountants members hit by data breach Union demands answers on Qantas AI plans 1 in 3 small businesses don't think they're a cyber target, new research finds Exclusive: Aussie toy distributor listed by M3rx ransomware Exclusive: Australian Computer Society investigating possible breach after ShinyHunters hack claims The industry speaks – part 2: World Password Day 2026 Aussie schools breach: The Instructure hack “transcends an isolated IT incident” Exclusive: Aussie car part importer Strategic Imports allegedly breached by threat actors New South Wales, other states, investigating Instructure/Canvas data breach Australian Cyber Security Centre warns of ClickFix campaign leveraging Australian infrastructure Queensland Department of Education confirms students & staff impacted by ShinyHunters data breach ACMA takes action against SpinTel & Yomojo over mobile number fraud violations The Industry Speaks, Part 1: World Password Day 2026 Qualys and Converge tie cyber insurance pricing to real-time security posture Fakeout: Iranian APT caught hiding behind Chaos ransomware activity Exclusive: Australian energy management firm allegedly breached by SafePay Real estate giant Cushman & Wakefield confirms cyber incident, Qilin and ShinyHunters claim attack CrowdStrike expands Project QuiltWorks as more partners join AI security coalition Hacked: ALS discloses cyber incident, unauthorised access to IT systems Microsoft the main target of AI phishing attacks, report uncovers Attackers increasingly turning to trusted security tools to compromise Aussie victims Exclusive: Champion Homes confirms customer data compromised in “cyber event” Australia, Japan commit to partnership to meet cyber security challenges & strengthen cyber defences NSW Treasury cyber incident contained, impact no longer ‘significant’ WA rental scam surge: Tenants targeted with fake $500 discount trap Aussie Information Commissioner launches Privacy Awareness Week 2026 Unregistered branded text messages to be labelled ‘Unverified’ from 1 July Exclusive: Major Australian jewellery brand confirms cyber incident Watch this! Komari server monitor tool abused by hackers Act Now! ACSC warns of active exploitation of cPanel & WHM critical vulnerability Exclusive: Kiwi electrical contractor confirms cyber attack Exclusive: Prime Properties listed as breach victim by M3rx ransomware DigiCert launches AI Trust architecture to secure agents, models, and content Winners of the 2026 Australian Cyber Awards unveiled Op-Ed: Redefining performance in the AI-powered SOC NZ council cyber attack leads to ID and financial data being exposed Alert! Wave of fake toll, parking scams impacting countries worldwide, including Australia and New Zealand Vect unveiled: Inside an emerging ransomware group’s affiliate network Exclusive: Gelatissimo confirms unauthorised access, investigates DragonForce hack claims Aussie ice-cream franchise Gelatissimo suffers alleged hack by DragonForce Anthropic Mythos: The model, the myth and the mundane​ Report: Aussie small businesses doing it tough as job scams double, losses rise Cyber attacks on medical devices pose ‘significant’ impact on real-life patient care Twisted Firestarter! Aussie, US, and UK cyber agencies warn of Cisco malware campaign Generation Life informs customers of “cyber incident” as owner shares incident with ASX CBA launches new scam-finding AI agent Sri Lankan government hack sees $3.7m destined for Australia stolen CrowdStrike extends cloud threat detection to Google Cloud Hey big spender! Microsoft to invest $25bn in Australian AI infrastructure Genetec marks Sydney milestone with visit by high commissioner of Canada to Australia Rental platform under fire for collecting excessive personal data Exclusive: SA genealogical research firm confirms cyber incident following SafePay ransom claims PentenAmio announces acquisition of Armour Communications Exclusive: Aussie passports compromised in alleged Favelle Favco data breach Cutting edge: Anthropic’s Claude Mythos preview is a ‘double-edged sword’, expert says Treasury staffer charged for NSW government data breach Op-Ed: AI won’t patch the holes in your SOC Game on! More than a third of FIFA World Cup 2026 partners expose Aussies to email fraud risk Dark web markets: A complete Aussie identity costs as little as $200 Exclusive: NSW-based Strata Republic allegedly breached by Kairos ransomware group Mortgage fraud now harder to detect thanks to AI McGraw Hill confirms ShinyHunters breach, won’t confirm if any Aussie customers impacted Update now: Active exploitation of Nginx UI vulnerability CVE-2026-33032 underway National Defence Strategy 2026: Spending on military cyber capability to reach at least $15bn Exclusive: Qld pharmacy chain allegedly breached by Kairos ransomware Op-Ed: ASIO has broken its silence on cyber crime, and you should listen Too-hard basket: NIST to scale back CVE updates as vulnerabilities soar OpenAI launches GPT 5.4-Cyber in response to Anthropic Glasswing NZ racehorse auction stalled by cyber attack Op-Ed: Microsoft April Patch Tuesday reveals 167 vulnerabilities ADF joins international military exercise focused on cyber resilience and multi-domain operations OpenAI CEO’s home targeted in attempted drive-by just days after Molotov attack Exclusive: Aussie communications company Mastercom ‘aware’ of INC Ransom claims Booking.com confirms cyber incident, customer reservation data potentially compromised Report: Majority of CISOs not ready for the next big cyber attack Exclusive: Aboriginal community organisation confirms cyber incident following INC Ransom claims The industry speaks: World Identity Management Day 2026 WASTED! GTA developer Rockstar Games confirms hack as ShinyHunters demands ‘pay or leak’ Exclusive: Gunra ransomware lists Eric Davis Dental as breach victim Op-Ed: Why zero trust for OT should start at the boundary, not the boiler room Exclusive: NSW pharmacy management firm allegedly breached by INC Ransom US Treasury launches intelligence-sharing initiative with crypto companies Citigroup says AI speeds up new account openings Cyber war: Pro-Iranian hackers vow to fight on despite a fragile ceasefire with the US Exclusive: Victorian resort hotel allegedly breached by Space Bears ransomware Game on! Nationwide student competition aims to tackle Australia’s cyber skills gap Exclusive: Anubis ransomware gang claims hack of WA-based Shine Aviation Ransomware group claims hack of legal giant Jones Day Anthropic, partners announce Project Glasswing cyber security initiative Exclusive: Aussie tech firm Seeing Machines confirms potential cyber security incident
Op-Ed: Microsoft June Patch Tuesday reveals 200 vulnerabilities
Adam Barnett, lead software engineer, Rapid7 · 2026-06-11 · via Security

While the Redmond software giant quietly addresses more than 300 browser vulnerabilities, it’s also responding to a very angry vulnerability researcher.

Microsoft published 200 vulnerabilities in its June 2026 Patch Tuesday.

Microsoft is not aware of exploitation in the wild or public disclosure for any of these vulnerabilities, which is similar to last month. However, several of May’s vulnerabilities ended up on CISA KEV in the days following their publication.

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So far this month, Microsoft has also provided patches to address 360 browser vulnerabilities, which is an order of magnitude more than has been typical in any given month over the past few years. As usual, browser vulnerabilities are not included in the Patch Tuesday count above.

Indeed, the vast, and presumably sustained, uptick in the number of browser vulnerabilities has led to Microsoft no longer enumerating Chromium CVEs in the Security Update Guide. Other vulnerability categories, especially Linux kernel vulnerabilities, are seeing a similar increase in AI-assisted vulnerability reports.

In recent weeks, an independent vulnerability researcher going by the pseudonym Nightmare Eclipse has attracted significant attention by publishing details of six Microsoft vulnerabilities, including elevation of privilege vulnerabilities in Defender, and a Secure Boot disk encryption bypass. The researcher provided full proof-of-concept code for some, and provided significant but incomplete details around the path to exploitation for others. Microsoft has confirmed that these disclosures were not coordinated, and it is clear that the relationship between this researcher and Microsoft is less than cordial.

Two of the disclosures emerged in the hours after last month’s Patch Tuesday, which provides maximum visibility, while limiting Microsoft’s ability to respond without out-of-cycle patches.

At the time of writing, Microsoft has provided mitigation advice and patches for CVE-2026-33825, CVE-2026-45585, CVE-2026-45498, and CVE-2026-41091, leaving only two elevation of privilege vulnerabilities unpatched, known as MiniPlasma and GreenPlasma.

However, a recent blog post by Nightmare Eclipse with the title “7” has been widely interpreted to mean that there is at least one more vulnerability to come. The post contained no content other than an image of Albert Wesker, a character from the Resident Evil video game series who formerly worked as a researcher for a technology corporation before going rogue.

Any inference around the possible meaning of the image is left as an exercise for the reader.

Given the timing of last month’s disclosures in the hours following Patch Tuesday, a further high-friction disclosure today would perhaps be unsurprising. Indeed, a new blog post and a new GitHub account from the same researcher have emerged in the hours following Microsoft’s publication of the June 2026 Patch Tuesday updates. The apparent seventh disclosure is nicknamed RoguePlanet, and appears to describe another elevation of privilege to SYSTEM in Defender.

It is not at all difficult to understand why Microsoft and many blue team practitioners are deeply alarmed by the partial or even full disclosure of proof-of-concept code for an ongoing series of vulnerabilities affecting fully patched Windows systems. However, multiple leading voices in the broader vulnerability disclosure community have expressed concern that Microsoft’s invocation of the Digital Crimes Unit in a 27 May blog post may yet prove counterproductive, especially if it causes other researchers to back away from mutually beneficial engagements with MSRC.

A few days later, MSRC issued a further statement clarifying that they have no intention of pursuing action against security researchers, but only those who break the law or engage in malicious activity causing real harm. For now, one safe conclusion is that this unusually sensational Microsoft vulnerability management story arc is far from over.

Every so often, a new round of denial-of-service vulnerabilities emerges that affect web servers implementing HTTP/2 and HTTP/3 standards. This class of vulnerabilities is likely to expand further as researchers, including the discoverers of CVE-2026-49160, use advances in LLM capability to probe not just specific software, but also the standards on which software rests. Microsoft warns that exploitation leads to uncontrolled resource consumption over a network, and expects that exploitation is more likely. The advisory credits both a third-party research firm and OpenAI’s Codex.

Microsoft has not yet directly addressed another HTTP/2 vulnerability, which allows trivial denial-of-service against the default HTTP/2 configuration of multiple web server platforms, including Microsoft IIS. CVE-2026-49975, also known as HTTP/2 Bomb, became public knowledge a week ago. This denial of service works by exhausting memory on the target server, and unlike a distributed denial-of-service attack, there is no requirement that an attacker control a large amount of bandwidth. Patches are available for NGINX and Apache, with IIS presumably to follow at some point. If practically possible, disabling HTTP/2 is a valid mitigation.

The Microsoft PowerToys utility provides a wide variety of useful control and configuration options for Windows power users that aren’t otherwise easily accessible. It turns out that PowerToys also offers an undocumented extra: local elevation of privilege to SYSTEM via successful exploitation of CVE-2026-42902. It is worth noting that the fix was included in PowerToys v0.99.1 on 29 April 2026, without any apparent mention in the release notes. Attackers with patch-diffing toolkits may well take note of this discrepancy.

There are no significant Microsoft product life cycle changes this month. SQL Server 2016 moves beyond regular extended support and into the pay-to-play Extended Security Updates (ESU) phase after 14 July 2026. On that same date, SharePoint 2016 and 2019 will also move past extended support, but since there’s no ESU available, the only remaining option for fully supported self-hosted SharePoint after the middle of next month will be SharePoint Subscription Edition.

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