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Security Affairs

Agent’s claims on WhatsApp access spark security concerns Meta accused of violating DSA by failing to safeguard minors Large-scale Roblox hacking operation shut down by Ukrainian authorities CVE-2026-42208: LiteLLM bug exploited 36 hours after its disclosure Internet censorship index reveals Russia’s lead and widespread content blocking All supported cPanel versions hit by critical auth bug, now patched U.S. CISA adds Microsoft Windows Shell and ConnectWise ScreenConnect flaws to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog ShinyHunters exploit Anodot incident to target Vimeo CVE-2026-3854 GitHub flaw enables remote code execution Signal Phishing Campaign Targets German Officials in Suspected Russian Operation Microsoft fixes Entra ID flaw enabling privilege escalation New Android spyware Morpheus linked to Italian surveillance firm NCSC launches SilentGlass, a plug-in device to secure HDMI and DisplayPort links Medtronic discloses security incident after ShinyHunters claimed theft of 9M+ records Chinese spy posed as researcher in spear-phishing campaign targeting NASA to steal defense software LINKEDIN BROWSERGATE Firefox bug CVE-2026-6770 enabled cross-site tracking and Tor fingerprinting Fast16: Pre-Stuxnet malware that targeted precision engineering software Italy moves to extradite Chinese national to the U.S. over hacking charges U.S. utility giant Itron discloses a security breach Critical bug in CrowdStrike LogScale let attackers access files GopherWhisper: new China-linked APT targets Mongolia with Go-based malware SECURITY AFFAIRS MALWARE NEWSLETTER ROUND 94 Trigona ransomware adopts custom tool to steal data and evade detection Security Affairs newsletter Round 574 by Pierluigi Paganini – INTERNATIONAL EDITION U.S. CISA adds SimpleHelp, Samsung, and D-Link flaws to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog Over 400,000 sites at risk as hackers exploit Breeze Cache plugin flaw (CVE-2026-3844) CISA reports persistent FIRESTARTER backdoor on Cisco ASA device in federal network 12-year-old Pack2TheRoot bug lets Linux users gain root privileges Signal phishing campaign targets Germany’s Bundestag President Julia Klöckner China-linked threat actors use consumer device botnets to evade detection, warn UK and partners Luxury cosmetics giant Rituals discloses data breach impacting member personal details iOS Flaw Let Deleted Notifications Linger, Apple Issues Fix RAMP Uncovered: Anatomy of Russia’s Ransomware Marketplace U.S. CISA adds a flaw in Microsoft Defender to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog Microsoft Graph API misused by new GoGra Linux malware for hidden communication DDoS wave continues as Mastodon hit after Bluesky incident Mirai Botnet exploits CVE-2025-29635 to target legacy D-Link routers Microsoft out-of-band updates fixed critical ASP.NET Core privilege escalation flaw Critical BRIDGE:BREAK flaws impact Lantronix and Silex Technology converters Venezuela energy sector targeted by highly destructive Lotus wiper 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heating plant amid rising energy threats CVE-2026-33032: severe nginx-ui bug grants unauthenticated server access U.S. CISA adds Microsoft SharePoint Server, and Microsoft Office Excel flaws to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog Mirax malware campaign hits 220K accounts, enables full remote control PHP Composer flaws enable remote command execution via Perforce VCS Microsoft Patch Tuesday for April 2026 fixed actively exploited SharePoint zero-day Personal data of 1 million gym members compromised in Basic-Fit security incident US, UK and Canada disrupt $45M crypto theft in Operation Atlantic ShinyHunters claim the hack of Rockstar Games breach and started leaking data Attackers target unpatched ShowDoc servers via CVE-2025-0520 U.S. CISA adds Adobe, Fortinet, Microsoft Exchange Server, and Microsoft Windows flaws to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog Fake Claude AI installer abuses DLL sideloading to deploy PlugX Hackers access Booking.com user data, company secures systems iPhone forensics expose Signal messages after app removal in U.S. case Citizen Lab: Webloc tracked 500M devices for global law enforcement Iran-linked group Handala claims to have breached three major UAE organizations CPUID watering hole attack spreads STX RAT malware Adobe fixes actively exploited Acrobat Reader flaw CVE-2026-34621 Hackers claim control over Venice San Marco anti-flood pumps SECURITY AFFAIRS MALWARE NEWSLETTER ROUND 92 Security Affairs newsletter Round 572 by Pierluigi Paganini – INTERNATIONAL EDITION Censys finds 5,219 devices exposed to attacks by Iranian APTs, majority in U.S. GlassWorm evolves with Zig dropper to infect multiple developer tools CVE-2026-39987: Marimo RCE exploited in hours after disclosure Ransomware attack on ChipSoft knocks EHR services offline across hospitals in the Netherlands and Belgium UAT-10362 linked to LucidRook attacks targeting Taiwan-based institutions EngageLab SDK flaw opens door to private data on 50M Android devices Bitcoin Depot hack leads to $3.6M Bitcoin theft via stolen credentials Eurail data breach impacted 308,777 people Malicious PDF reveals active Adobe Reader zero-day in the wild Masjesu botnet targets IoT devices while evading high-profile networks The alleged breach of China’s National Supercomputing Center can have serious geopolitical consequences Internet-Exposed ICS Devices Raise Alarm for Critical Sectors U.S. CISA adds a flaw in Ivanti EPMM to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog
Pwn2Own Berlin 2026, Day Three: DEVCORE Crowned Master of Pwn, $1.298 Million Total
Pierluigi Pa · 2026-05-17 · via Security Affairs

Pwn2Own Berlin 2026 ended with 47 zero-days and $1.29M in payouts, as DEVCORE dominated the competition across all categories.

Pwn2Own Berlin 2026 ended after three intense days, with participants discovering 47 unique zero-days, and earning $1,298,250 in total payouts. Pwn2Own Berlin 2026 wrapped up at OffensiveCon on Saturday with a final day that sealed DEVCORE’s dominance across every metric that matters.

That's a wrap on Pwn2Own Berlin 2026! 🏆 $1,298,250 awarded. 47 unique 0-days. 3 days of absolute chaos. And talk about main character energy – congrats to DEVCORE for claiming Master of Pwn with 50.5 points and $505,000 – they never slowed down. See you next year! #Pwn2Ownpic.twitter.com/ZcWN8VPLDS

— TrendAI Zero Day Initiative (@thezdi) May 16, 2026

Going into day three, DEVCORE held a commanding lead with 40.5 Master of Pwn points and $405,000, a gap that most competitors could not realistically close in a single day. But the final schedule still had serious targets on it, including Microsoft SharePoint, VMware ESXi, and further attempts against Windows 11, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, and OpenAI Codex. Plenty of room for the scoreboard to shift, and plenty of incentive for researchers who had been waiting for the right moment.

One of the most significant results of the day came from splitline of the DEVCORE Research Team, who chained two bugs together to successfully exploit Microsoft SharePoint, collecting $100,000 and 10 Master of Pwn points in the process. SharePoint had survived a failed attempt by Rapid7’s Stephen Fewer on day two, making this a vindication of sorts for a target that had initially looked like it might escape the competition unscathed. Two bugs, one successful chain, and another Microsoft server product joins the list of things that got compromised in Berlin this week.

That result alone was enough to make the final outcome mathematically settled. DEVCORE finished the three-day competition with 50.5 Master of Pwn points and $505,000, a performance with no precedent in recent editions of the contest. STARLabs SG came in second place with 25 points and $242,500, followed by Out Of Bounds in third with 12.75 points and $95,750.

The researchers Nguyen Hoang Thach (@hi_im_d4rkn3ss) of STARLabs SG (@starlabs_sg) exploited a Memory Corruption bug to target VMware ESXi with the Cross-tenant Code Execution add-on, earning $200,000 and 20 Master of Pwn points.

OpenAI’s Codex coding agent, already compromised twice on day one, took another hit on the final day. Satoki Tsuji of Ikotas Labs abused an external control vulnerability to exploit the platform and demonstrate code execution, earning $20,000 and 4 Master of Pwn points. Codex was successfully exploited three separate times across the competition by three different researchers, a pattern that should prompt serious reflection inside OpenAI’s security organization. Each exploit used a different technique, meaning the attack surface is not a single narrow flaw but something broader.

Anthropic’s Claude Code, which was on the schedule as a target, was approached by Compass Security, who had already collected $40,000 for hacking OpenAI Codex on day one. Their Claude Code attempt hit a one-vulnerability collision with a previous entry, earning $20,000 and 2 Master of Pwn points rather than a full win.

A collision means part of what they found was already known from a prior submission — frustrating, but still a partial result that confirms working research was in hand.

The pattern that defined the entire competition continued on the final day. Viettel Cyber Security’s Le Tran Hai Tung, dungnm, and hieuvd used an integer overflow to escalate privileges on a fully patched Windows 11 machine in the fifth round, adding $7,500 and 3 Master of Pwn points to their tally. Windows 11 was exploited successfully multiple times across all three days by multiple independent teams, each using a different vulnerability. By the end of the competition it had become one of the most-targeted and most-compromised systems in Berlin.

Red Hat Enterprise Linux for Workstations also continued to absorb hits. Sina Kheirkhah of Summoning Team used two bugs to exploit the platform, though one was a previously known issue, landing him in partial-credit territory at $7,000 and 1.5 Master of Pwn points. Hyunwoo Kim separately chained a use-after-free and an uninitialized memory bug for a clean privilege escalation win on the same platform, earning $5,000 and 2 Master of Pwn points.

Vendors now have 90 days to release fixes before technical details become public.

Last year’s Berlin edition paid out $1,078,750. This year crossed $1.298 million, a 20 percent increase, with eight more unique vulnerabilities discovered. The growth in both numbers reflects something real: more researchers are participating, targets are diversifying well beyond traditional browsers and operating systems into AI infrastructure and developer tooling, and the economics of vulnerability research at this level continue to attract serious talent.

DEVCORE’s dominance this year was total. That is not luck. That is a research program operating at a consistently high level across an entire week of competition.

The complete list of results of Pwn2Own Berlin 2026 Day Three is available here.

Follow me on Twitter: @securityaffairs and Facebook and Mastodon

Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, Pwn2Own Berlin 2026)