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CyberScoop

Security researchers find stalkers abusing Chrome's sync feature SonicWall customers under threat as attackers exploit 2 zero-days Dems press DNI nominee Jay Clayton on election security questions, but leave dismayed Forget the model. When it comes to cybersecurity, it’s all about the harness White House details ‘Gold Eagle’ clearinghouse for AI cyber threats Microsoft discloses ‘the mother of all’ vulnerability loads, tripling June’s previous record Treasury sanctions First VPN Service, others for abetting ransomware gangs States are building their own election defense networks as federal support evaporates Europe strikes out against Russia’s Turla over espionage, ‘destructive attacks’ Officials once again warn defenders that Russian hackers are targeting network devices AI-generated code has made security debt a governance problem Armenian national pleads guilty to Ryuk ransomware attacks CISA looks to remedy ailments from big May credential leak Former DigitalMint ransomware negotiator who duped clients sentenced to 70 months in jail Interpol cybercrime crackdown nets 5,800 arrests across 97 countries 764 splinter group leader sentenced to 40 years in jail French nonprofit starts global intelligence and research hub for AI cyber threats Found fast, fixed slow: The gap the AI clearinghouse must close Spain arrests suspected hacker linked to Russian hacktivist campaign Deepfake CSAM lawsuit against xAI, Grok expands Suspected Chinese espionage group used a Roundcube exploit chain to burrow into universities US Army websites defaced with pro-Kurdish sentiments, insults to Trump Sysdig clocks first documented case of agentic ransomware Someone infected a spyware probe overseer with spyware Alleged longstanding member of Scattered Spider extradited to US Researchers spot exploitation of another critical Oracle defect U.S. lifting export control restrictions on Anthropic’s Mythos, Fable This phishing kit looks more like BEC-as-a-service Citrix patches a new NetScaler flaw with echoes of CitrixBleed Trump budget boss Russell Vought open to re-staffing CISA DHS to unveil replacement council for critical infrastructure cybersecurity How ransomware syndicates weaponize corporate-style organization Warner bill would create federally vetted list for secure, trustworthy AI agents Supreme Court approves mail-in ballots that arrive after Election Day Supreme Court delivers ‘major win’ for tech privacy in Chatrie ruling What the post-quantum executive order really demands of CISOs ATF cancels controversial commercial geolocation contract FCC passes new cybersecurity rules for emergency systems, undersea cables Federal court rules Trump election-focused executive order illegal Russia uses Cellebrite to break into human rights activist’s phone, even after cancellation of contract Minnesota man known as ‘Snoopy’ sentenced in DraftKings hack Why patch directives only go so far Malicious hackers exploit Cisco zero-day for highest access level at communications service provider In a first, a court takedown goes after two cybercrime tools at once Open-source security is posing challenges governments can't easily solve Justice Department seizes infrastructure used by cyber scam and criminal marketplace Algerian man charged with running two cybercrime marketplaces Court rules SAVE database illegal, orders it dismantled Trump executive orders speed up post-quantum migration, boost industry Intel agencies: Frontier AI models will reshape cybersecurity faster than expected Authorities disrupt Evil Corp’s SocGholish botnet Congress tees up No FAKES Act, aiming at AI-generated deepfakes How software development's speed obsession enabled TeamPCP’s chaos crusade Accenture shells out $4.18B on three companies in big industrial cybersecurity push Attackers hit pair of critical Fortinet vulnerabilities the vendor disclosed in April Lawmakers leary about Trump administration’s Anthropic order AI’s constant patching treadmill can be a security problem A case for how to shape ‘ingredient lists’ for AI models Google exposes China espionage group that’s been lurking in networks undetected since 2023 Cybersecurity experts don’t think Anthropic’s Fable 5 presents a unique threat Anthropic disables new models after government calls them a national security concern FBI takes down massive China-based cybercrime network that caused $1.9B in losses US, France, and Italian authorities shut down massive deepfake porn site Conti ransomware group member pleads guilty, faces up to 20 years in prison ShinyHunters is actively extorting universities after exploiting an unpatched Oracle flaw CyberCorps is adapting to AI. The budget isn’t keeping up. Russian national charged in connection with Void Blizzard espionage campaign OpenAI: ‘Likely’ Chinese influence operation tried to use ChatGPT to stir debate on data centers CISA directive orders agencies to prioritize vulnerability patching in a new way Microsoft breaks Patch Tuesday record with 206 vulnerabilities Anthropic’s new model is Mythos on a leash CISA is rethinking how it prioritizes risks and vulnerabilities for feds, private sector Cisco customers encounter another SD-WAN zero-day under attack Meta accuses NSO Group of defying spyware injunction, files contempt of court complaint The AI security race needs accountability, not overregulation Nightmare Eclipse incident shows the researcher-vendor fights may never fully go away Hill Dems hammer GOP for $250M CISA budget cut Your AI agent could become your biggest insider threat Inside the race to adapt to an AI-powered security world European authorities crack down on illegal streaming networks DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin pinpoints optimal CISA staffing levels DOD wants to integrate cyber in all operations, and integrate security into AI Trump administration releases scaled-back AI executive order Anthropic expanding access to Project Glasswing Attackers are exploiting Palo Alto Networks defect that initially flew under the radar Tina Peters, convicted in election-security breach, emerges defiant and vows legal fight USPS moving forward with mail-in ballot changes as courts weigh Trump’s election order Election threats are focused on campaign systems, not voting machines Tennessee man linked to 764 accused of series of crimes against children dating back to 2022 Federal audit reveals NIST’s NVD is plagued by poor planning and duplication House panel poised to hold hearing centered on AI impact on cyber Google security engineer accused of turning confidential search trends into $1.2M win on Polymarket Zapier fixes bug chain that researchers say risked widespread account takeover OpenAI heralds cybersecurity, election interference safeguard plans for 2026 midterms FBI warns US-based law firms to be on the lookout for cybercrime group that steals data in person UK spy chief labels AI ‘unstoppable force’ with offensive, defensive ramifications for cyberspace CrowdStrike disrupts Glassworm botnet that preyed on open-source supply chain Apple open-sources quantum-resistant encryption code White House charts new course for federal agencies and cybersecurity logging Anthropic: Mythos finds more than 10,000 software flaws in first month
Finding vulnerabilities was never the hard part
Greg Otto · 2026-07-06 · via CyberScoop

I keep hearing the same frustration when I talk with security leaders. The real problem sitting on their desk isn’t finding vulnerabilities. It’s deciding which ones actually matter.

The industry has spent billions on better visibility. We’ve convinced ourselves that if we could just discover more vulnerabilities, collect more data, and ingest more threat intelligence, we’d become more secure. But look around. Organizations still aren’t more secure. They’re just overwhelmed.

Then AI arrived and changed the game entirely. In a matter of months, vulnerability discovery accelerated dramatically. AI systems review code faster than human researchers ever could. They identify weaknesses at unprecedented scale. They scan continuously without the limitations of time, staffing, or attention. The headlines have been everywhere. Government leaders are reevaluating AI laws. CEOs are tossing and turning at night.

But we are focusing on the wrong issue. None of this is actually solving what matters most.

For years, security teams have been drowning in findings. Every new threat feed promised greater visibility. What arrived instead was noise—more data, more alerts, more dashboards, more vulnerabilities. Rarely clarity. Now AI is pouring gasoline on that fire.

The conversations around AI in cybersecurity often get stuck in the wrong place. People debate whether it will help defenders move faster or enable attackers more easily. Both matter, but they are not the core issue.

The real consequence of AI is that it’s exposing something organizations have avoided facing. A vulnerability is not risk, it’s just a clue. Risk emerges when information connects to context: how critical the affected asset is, what controls surround it, how likely exploitation is, the business processes it supports, and what happens operationally if it fails.

Without that context, prioritization becomes impossible. Resources get spent on low-risk issues while mission-critical, vulnerabilities sit unfixed.

Now AI is now making the data volume problem almost impossible to comprehend. An enterprise working with hundreds of software vendors, cloud providers, contractors, and technology partners must investigate every relationship. It’s like a cybersecurity nesting doll where AI continuously identifies vulnerabilities across that entire ecosystem, every minute of every day.

The real challenge today isn’t discovering weaknesses. It’s determining which of tens of thousands of newly discovered weaknesses could actually disrupt operations, impact customers, halt revenue, or create regulatory exposure. Most organizations can’t answer that question quickly.

Some still rank risk using severity scores built for technical teams rather than business leaders. Others rely on manual triage that was already struggling before AI. Many still measure security maturity by how many findings they identify rather than the speed and accuracy of their decisions.

These approaches don’t work anymore. They probably didn’t work yesterday either.

What’s uncomfortable to acknowledge is that AI isn’t creating a cybersecurity crisis. It is revealing one that’s existed for years. The organizations that succeed in this an AI world will transform discovery into judgment faster than their competitors. When AI can find nearly every weakness, security belongs to those who know what to act on. It belongs to those who can connect data to business reality.

That’s the real edge. That’s what separates secure organizations from those that are just collecting more findings.