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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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Hidden VMs: how hackers leverage QEMU to stealthily steal data and spread malware Nexcorium Mirai variant exploits TBK DVR flaw to launch DDoS attacks Microsoft Defender under attack as three zero-days, two of them still unpatched, enable elevated access Kyrgyzstan-based crypto exchange Grinex shuts down after $13.7M cyber heist, blames Western Intelligence DraftKings hacker sentenced to prison, ordered to pay $1.4 Million Operation PowerOFF: 53 DDoS domains seized and 3 Million criminal accounts uncovered Inside ZionSiphon: politically driven malware aims at Israeli water systems U.S. CISA adds a flaw in Apache ActiveMQ to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog Cisco fixed four critical flaws in Identity Services and Webex Cookeville Regional Medical Center hospital data breach impacts 337,917 people AI platform n8n abused for stealthy phishing and malware delivery From clinics to government: UAC-0247 expands cyber campaign across Ukraine Sweden reports cyberattack attempt on 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
Hospitality Sector Hit by Phishing Campaign Using Fake Guest Complaint Emails
https://www.facebook.com/sec.affairs · 2026-06-27 · via Security Affairs

Microsoft warns of a phishing campaign targeting the hospitality sector with fake guest emails that install TonRAT using resilient persistence.

Microsoft Threat Intelligence published a detailed analysis on an ongoing hacking campaign against hospitality organizations that has been running since April 2026. The targets are specific: device names observed across compromised environments include strings like “reception,” “frontdesk,” “reservations,” “accueil,” “recepcja,” and “recepce” in English, French, Polish, Czech, and Spanish. The attacker knows exactly who opens guest-related emails without thinking twice about it.

The delivery mechanism is what Microsoft calls authentication laundering.

“The threat actor uses Calendly’s email notification system and Google’s URL redirect functionality to construct a multi-hop delivery chain in which the direct Calendly path passes Sender Policy Framework (SPF), DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM), and Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting, and Conformance (DMARC) checks.” reads the report published by Microsoft.

The emails arrive with the display name “Booking Manager (via Calendly)” and carry lures about bedbug infestations, health inspections, guest complaints, final warnings, and threatened suspensions. They came in Japanese, Danish, and Dutch, with Japanese the most common. The researchers observed that the messages have no recipient name, no property name which suggests this is high-volume list-driven sending, not tailored spearphishing.

Upon clicking the embedded link, the victim is routed through four hops: a Calendly redirect to share.google, then to www.google.com, then to a freshly registered Cloudflare-fronted .cfd domain sitting behind a Turnstile challenge. That challenge serves double duty as an anti-analysis gate and a geolocation filter before the payload lands. The downloaded archive contains a shortcut file named IMG-<numbers>.png.lnk in Wave 1 or PHOTO-<numbers>.png.lnk in Wave 2, both sized consistently between 1,989 and 2,079 bytes, suggesting the same builder tool across the campaign.

Opening the shortcut fires PowerShell. The script uses BigInt arithmetic to decode a download URL, a technique that evolved across seven distinct obfuscation phases over the course of the campaign.

“A defining characteristic of this campaign is its steady but disciplined obfuscation evolution. Microsoft observed seven PowerShell obfuscation phases over the course of the campaign, but the underlying logic remained consistent: decode embedded data through arithmetic operations, recover the next-stage content, and retrieve a PowerShell script that runs from the %TEMP% folder.” continues the report. “This pattern suggests that the threat actor is iterating for durability against static detections rather than experimenting with entirely new tradecraft. “

The operators never abandoned PowerShell or Node.js. They just kept re-skinning the same working loader as detections caught up.

The decoded script downloads a legitimate Node.js v24.13.0 runtime from nodejs.org into user space, then runs a JavaScript implant tracked as TonRAT from AppData\Local\Nodejs\. No system-wide Node installation is needed. Wave 2 added an intermediate stage: the downloaded PowerShell script triggers dynamic .NET DLL compilation through csc.exe and cvtres.exe, producing small 3,072-byte DLLs with random names before reaching Node.js. Microsoft assesses this step is preparatory or conditional, as the compiled DLL wasn’t observed being explicitly loaded in available telemetry.

The persistence design is what makes this campaign technically notable.

“The persistence design itself is a meaningful post-compromise observation. The combination of a durable Node.js launch point in HKCU\Run and a repeatedly refreshed ProgramData payload through HKCU\RunOnce suggests an effort to maintain execution options across user sign-ins while also preserving a secondary recovery path.” states Microsoft. “This RunOnce loop is unusual enough that it might provide defenders with a strong hunting pivot even when file names, domains, or script syntax change.”

The RunOnce entry doesn’t fire once and disappear: the payload refreshes its own persistence after each execution, creating a loop. Microsoft observed this in practice: Defender blocked the PE payload xmnrwv9l.exe on a confirmed compromised device, but the Node.js Run key survived. Two days later, the implant reactivated, reconnected to new C2 domains, and resumed pushing additional payloads. Blocking one path left the other alive.

Post-compromise activity on a subset of devices included C2 beaconing to fixed IPs over non-standard ports including 56001, 56002, 56003, 8443, 8445, 8453, and 5555. Some hosts showed headless browser automation with --headless --no-sandbox flags, a geolocation check via ip-api.com, and a forced shutdown through cmd /c shutdown -s -t 0.

The forced shutdown may have served to interrupt user activity, reduce defender response time at a specific stage, or conceal visible symptoms after automated browser tasks completed. Microsoft has not confirmed data theft, ransomware deployment, or named any victims. The campaign’s ultimate objective remains unclear, which is itself a useful piece of information: whoever built this invested heavily in persistence and evasion for something they haven’t shown yet.

Complete remediation requires removing both persistence mechanisms simultaneously: the HKCU\RunOnce entry pointing into ProgramData, the HKCU\Run key pointing to the Node.js component, the Node.js runtime itself, and all associated .js files under AppData\Local\Nodejs\. Start with reception, reservations, and front office systems, and treat any device where Node.js appears in user-space paths as potentially compromised until proven otherwise.

The report includes Indicators of compromise (IoCs) for this campaign.

Follow me on Twitter: @securityaffairs and Facebook and Mastodon

Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, hospitality)