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Opinion

Op-Ed: Microsoft’s July Patch Tuesday reveals 622 vulnerabilities Op-Ed: The transaction was legitimate; the crime was hidden in the system Op-Ed: Why CISOs are drowning in alerts but missing the real threat Op-Ed: The reality of data-centric security and attribute-based access control Op-Ed: Australia’s cyber law is stuck in the past – the Slay Review is our chance to fix it Australian federal budget 2026: The industry perspective Op-Ed: Redefining performance in the AI-powered SOC Op-Ed: AI won’t patch the holes in your SOC Op-Ed: Australia inspired the EU’s online age restrictions, now it’s time for us to learn from them The industry speaks: World Identity Management Day 2026 Op-Ed: Why zero trust for OT should start at the boundary, not the boiler room The industry speaks: World Cloud Security Day 2026 The industry speaks: World Backup Day 2026 Op-Ed: Information sharing of cyber threats vital to national security Op-Ed: Building secure foundations for AI in the cloud Op-Ed: AI isn’t the threat, poor design is Op-Ed: Why Australia’s schools are becoming strategic targets for organised crime Op-Ed: Australia’s National AI Plan looks good on paper, but where are the teeth? Op-Ed: Australian organisations need federated authority to stay secure at scale Supply chain risk: Understanding the weakest link in cyber security
Op-Ed: Microsoft April Patch Tuesday reveals 167 vulnerabilities
Adam Barnett, lead software engineer, at Rapid7 · 2026-04-15 · via Opinion

Microsoft is publishing 167 vulnerabilities on the April 2026 Patch Tuesday, with some already facing exploitation, and more to come.

Microsoft is aware of exploitation in the wild for one of today’s vulnerabilities and of public disclosure for one other.

It evaluates 19 of the vulnerabilities published today as more likely to see future exploitation. So far this month, Microsoft has provided patches to address 80 browser vulnerabilities, which are not included in the Patch Tuesday count above.

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Regular Patch Tuesday watchers will know that these vulnerability totals are significantly higher than usual, especially the browser numbers.

Late last week, Microsoft published patches to resolve 60 browser vulnerabilities in a single day, which is a new record in that very specific category. It might be tempting to imagine that this sudden spike was tied to the buzz around the announcement a week ago today of Project Glasswing, but this is not the case.

Edge is based on the Chromium engine, and the Chromium maintainers acknowledge a wide range of researchers for the vulnerabilities that Microsoft republished last Friday. This reflects a significant industry-wide uptick in the volume of vulnerability reports over the past few weeks.

A safe conclusion is that this increase in volume is driven by ever-expanding AI capabilities. We should expect to see further increases in vulnerability reporting volume as the impact of AI models extends further, both in terms of capability and availability.

That’s my comfort vulnerability

When everything is changing rapidly, it can be tempting to look to familiar things for comfort.

SharePoint admins should start by addressing CVE-2026-32201, an exploited-in-the-wild spoofing vulnerability. The advisory doesn’t offer much detail, but does mention CWE-20: Improper Input Validation and low impact to confidentiality and integrity, with no impact to availability.

Of course, the greatest attacker impact is typically achieved by chaining together multiple vulnerabilities that by themselves might not seem so bad.

Ever-increasing novel AI capabilities in offensive cyber security now appear to provide real competition for all but the most elite human researchers; if it was ever valid to suppose that a vulnerability with a CVSS v3 base score of 6.5 was unlikely to cause much pain, it’s certainly not a safe defensive assumption in 2026. Patches are available for all supported versions of SharePoint, including SharePoint 2016, which moves beyond extended support on 14 July 2026.

Microsoft Defender receives a patch today for CVE-2026-33825, a local privilege escalation vulnerability for which Microsoft is aware of public disclosure. Successful exploitation leads to SYSTEM privileges, so this is certainly worth patching sooner rather than later.

Microsoft points out that no action should be required to install this update, since the Microsoft Defender Antimalware Platform automatically updates by default. A further silver lining is that systems that have disabled Microsoft Defender are not in an exploitable state. Hopefully, any such system is running a suitable third-party replacement for Defender’s capabilities.

The worm turns

The Windows Internet Key Exchange (IKE) Services Extensions is the site of CVE-2026-33824, a critical unauthenticated remote code execution vulnerability. Exploitation requires an attacker to send specially crafted packets to a Windows machine with IKE v2 enabled, which could enable remote code execution.

Vulnerabilities leading to unauthenticated RCE against modern Windows assets are relatively rare, or we’d see more wormable vulnerabilities self-propagating across the internet.

However, since IKE provides secure tunnel negotiation services, for instance for VPNs, it is necessarily exposed to untrusted networks and reachable in a pre-authorisation context. It’s hard to imagine this turning into a rampaging internet-wide worm, but there’s plenty of scope for initial access abuse, so this IKE vulnerability is still yikes.

The advisory does contain a section with potential mitigations for anyone unable to patch immediately, which centres on least-privilege restriction of relevant UDP traffic. This same portion of the advisory also furnishes a helpful link to the definition of the word “mitigations” in the MSDN glossary. All versions of Windows back as far as Server 2016 and Windows 10 1607 LTSC receive patches.

The advisory credits both the WARP and MORSE (Microsoft Offensive Research & Security Engineering) teams at Microsoft. MORSE appears in Acknowledgements over the past few years, but today marks the first explicit mention of WARP in a Microsoft security advisory Acknowledgements section; we can speculate that WARP is an internal designator for the Microsoft Windows Enterprise Security Team.

It’s life cycle, Jim

In Microsoft life cycle news, extended support ended yesterday (14 April 2026) for a wide range of Microsoft product legacy enterprise tools, including Dynamics C5 2016, Dynamics NAV 2016, App-V 5.0 and App-V 5.1, UE-V 2.1, and BitLocker Administration and Monitoring 2.5 SP1. Microsoft .NET 9 STS (Standard Term Support, as distinct from Long Term Support) was originally scheduled to move past the end of support in May 2026, but late last year, Microsoft granted a six-month extension, so that .NET 9 STS now reaches end of support on 10 November 2026.

A full analysis can be found here.

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