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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 Ransomware negotiator caught secretly assisting BlackCat extortion scheme North Korea’s Lazarus APT stole $290M from Kelp DAO The US NSA is using Anthropic’s Claude Mythos despite supply chain risk U.S. CISA adds Cisco Catalyst, Kentico Xperience, PaperCut NG/MF, Synacor ZCS, Quest KACE SMA, and JetBrains TeamCity flaws to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog Bluesky hit by 24-hour DDoS attack as pro-Iran group claims responsibility France’s ANTS ID System website hit by cyberattack, possible data breach Scattered Spider member Tyler Buchanan pleads guilty to major crypto theft CVE-2023-33538 under attack for a year, but exploitation still unsuccessful Third-party AI hack triggers Vercel breach, internal environments accessed AI Model Claude Opus turns bugs into exploits for just $2,283 Cyber attacks fuel surge in cargo theft across logistics industry SECURITY AFFAIRS MALWARE NEWSLETTER ROUND 93 Security Affairs newsletter Round 573 by Pierluigi Paganini – INTERNATIONAL EDITION 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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
21,786 Home Cameras, No Password, No Warning
Pierluigi Paganini · 2026-06-12 · via Security Affairs

21,786 live cameras stream with zero authentication. Cheap gear is the real risk, webcamXP open 46% of the time. Your home router is the broadcast tower.

In May 2026, Mysterium VPN queried a public internet-wide device index to count every camera and recorder that answers the open internet. They found more than three million reachable devices. Of those, 21,786 were streaming live video to anyone who pointed a browser at them, with no login, no challenge, and no warning to the person on the other side of the lens. That number is a floor, not a ceiling.

Two brands dominate the internet-reachable camera market: Hikvision and Dahua together account for most of the three million. But the headline figure isn’t about them.

Hikvision, by contrast, was open just 0.06% of the time. Dahua was effectively never open. The big brands fixed this years ago by making password setup mandatory before first use. The cheap end of the market never bothered.

“Hikvision-identified cameras were open just 0.06% of the time. Dahua was effectively never open, the direct dividend of those mandatory-activation policies. The exposure lives almost entirely at the cheap end.” reads the report published by MysteriumVPN. “Budget “HiSilicon-class” recorders were open 27.1% of the time, and a legacy webcam application called webcamXP hit 45.6%, meaning nearly half of every device of that type that answers the internet is broadcasting to anyone who asks.”

The single largest slice of open video is RTSP, the standard camera streaming protocol.

“A single generic protocol accounts for the largest share of all open video: 9,746 feeds were streaming over RTSP, the standard camera-streaming protocol, with no access control at all. RTSP was designed for streaming, not for security. Without any authentication layer, it is simply an open pipe.” continues the report.

No credentials to guess. No login screen to bypass. Just a direct feed to whoever finds the address.

Japan and the United States together account for more than a third of all open feeds, 19% and 17% respectively. That distribution doesn’t follow the global camera install base; it follows residential broadband. Japan’s count is driven by a handful of consumer ISPs whose customers appear disproportionately in the data. Moldova ranks eighth, almost entirely because of one national ISP.

A block of 961 feeds attributed to Huawei Cloud MX appears to be hosted camera-gateway infrastructure rather than home devices, inflating Mexico’s totals. Strip it out and the numbers shift slightly, but the story doesn’t change.

The networks feeding these open streams are Asahi Net, OCN, BIGLOBE, and NTT DOCOMO in Japan. Chunghwa Telecom in Taiwan. Deutsche Telekom in Germany. Verizon, Charter, and Comcast in the United States. These are home internet connections. These are living rooms, bedrooms, shop floors, and reception desks being broadcast to strangers.

None of this required any hacking. The researchers didn’t type a single password.

“We did not type a single password, default or otherwise, because doing so would be unauthorized access, the exact line this research refuses to cross.” states the report.”Every camera sitting behind a login that still answers to admin / admin is invisible in our headline figure. The true count a determined stranger could reach is larger, but we measured only what we could see without touching a key.”

The real count that a determined stranger could reach, by trying the defaults that Mirai exploited in 2016 and that Mirai’s descendants are still trying today, is larger. The 21,786 figure counts only what required zero effort at all.

The Mirai botnet in 2016 built one of the largest attack networks ever seen using nothing more than a short list of hardcoded default passwords: admin/12345 for Hikvision, admin/admin for Dahua and most budget recorders. Its descendants are still running the same credentials against the same devices right now. Regulators eventually caught up: California banned default passwords in January 2020, and the UK outlawed universal default passwords outright in April 2024 under its Product Security and Telecommunications Infrastructure Act. That fixes devices sold new today by companies that comply. It does nothing for the hundreds of millions of cameras already on walls, running firmware that will never be updated.

An open feed is not an abstract security finding. It tells a stranger when a home is empty, who lives there, and what their daily routine looks like. Feeds get aggregated, indexed, and traded. There are directories of open camera feeds that have run for years, built entirely on devices whose owners don’t know they’re listed.

“Buying cheaper gear to save money on security cameras is, in a very direct sense, paying to be surveilled. Privacy and security on your home network are worth investing in.” conlcudes the report.”A camera that phones home to a manufacturer with a functioning security team, that forces a password before first use, and that receives firmware updates is worth meaningfully more than a budget recorder that does none of those things, with the gap between them visible in our data.”

The fix isn’t complicated: set a real password, disable UPnP on your router, turn off any RTSP stream you didn’t deliberately configure, update firmware, and if the device hasn’t been patched in years, take it off the internet. Prefer cameras that reach out through an encrypted relay rather than accepting inbound connections, because there’s no open port to find from the outside. If you never set a password during initial setup, assume the device still has the factory default and change it before anything else.

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Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, cameras)