Published Date: July 06, 2026
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Cybersecurity professionals have long acknowledged that breaches are inevitable. However, many organizations still prioritize prevention over preparation for the inevitable breach.

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Coverage for “Cybersecurity”

Showing 1-10 of 25 stories · from 434 tracked matches · in Cybersecurity · page 1 of 3.

  • AI isn’t closing the skills gap — it’s exposing the validation gap

    CSO Online Article posted: 44m ago
    Story Summary

    If you wanted to become a basketball star, how would you get started? You wouldn’t read a book on basketball and take an online course. You’d set up a hoop in your driveway, join a local team to train, and play in real matches. So why do we expect cybersecurity professionals to learn their skills from theory and static training? The cybersecurity industry t…

    Why it matters: AI progress resets what products and jobs look like.
  • Trump Administration Lifts Restrictions on Anthropic’s Claude Models After Cybersecurity Alarm

    SecurityWeek Article posted: July 2, 2026 1 view
    Story Summary

    Anthropic said Tuesday night that its AI model called Claude Fable 5 is now widely available. The post Trump Administration Lifts Restrictions on Anthropic’s Claude Models After Cybersecurity Alarm appeared first on SecurityWeek .

    Why it matters: Raises security risk for users and organizations.
  • The AI Token Costs That Can Break Cybersecurity

    SecurityWeek Article posted: June 30, 2026 3 views
    Story Summary

    As cybersecurity platforms embrace agentic AI, organizations must balance detection performance against the escalating costs of token consumption, deployment architecture, and AI credits. The post The AI Token Costs That Can Break Cybersecurity appeared first on SecurityWeek .

    Why it matters: AI progress resets what products and jobs look like.
  • 2026 Cybersecurity Assessment: The Gap Between Awareness and Resilience

    The Hacker News Article posted: July 1, 2026 3 views
    Story Summary

    Organizations have never had greater awareness of cyber risk. Yet turning that awareness into operational resilience has never been more challenging. The 2026 Bitdefender Cybersecurity Assessment confirms this is the case, as this year's findings reveal a series of surprising contradictions. Here are a few examples, based on the independent survey of 1,200…

    Why it matters: Raises security risk for users and organizations.
  • Cybersecurity is no longer about protection. It’s about survival.

    CSO Online Article posted: June 23, 2026 4 views
    Story Summary

    For years, cybersecurity professionals have been repeating the same warning: Every company will eventually be breached. Fine. Let’s accept that. Then why do so many organizations still behave as if the near sole purpose of cybersecurity is to prevent the breach from ever happening? That is the contradiction at the heart of modern cybersecurity strategy. We…

    Why it matters: Raises security risk for users and organizations.
  • CubeSpace CW0057 Reaction Wheel

    CISA Article posted: July 2, 2026 22 views
    Story Summary

    View CSAF Summary Successful exploitation of this vulnerability could allow an attacker to upload arbitrary malicious firmware to the device. The following versions of CubeSpace CW0057 Reaction Wheel are affected: CW0057 Reaction Wheel CVSS Vendor Equipment Vulnerabilities v3 6.1 CubeSpace CubeSpace CW0057 Reaction Wheel Improper Verification of Cryptographic Signature Background Critical Infrastructure Sectors: Communications Countries/Areas Deployed: Worldwide Company Headquarters Location: South Africa Vulnerabilities Expand All + CVE-2026-13743 CubeSpace CW0057 Reaction Wheel firmware versions prior to 5.0.20 are vulnerable to an Improper Verification of Cryptographic Signature vulnerability. This could allow an attacker with physical access to the product to upload arbitrary malicious firmware to the device without authentication. View CVE Details Affected Products CubeSpace CW0057 Reaction Wheel Vendor: CubeSpace Product Version: CubeSpace CW0057 Reaction Wheel: Product Status: known_affected Remediations Vendor fix CubeSpace has released the following firmware versions for users to enable: Firmware version 5.0.20. Firmware version 5.0.20 introduces the capability for cryptographically verified secure boot; however, this protection is not enabled by default. Users must activate signed‑boot functionality, particularly the fully immutable mode, to achieve full security. Mitigation CubeSpace acknowledges the finding. The CW0057 reaction wheel authenticates firmware updates with a CRC-32 integrity check, which confirms image integrity but does not verify the source of an image. Exploitation requires direct physical access to the device and is not exploitable remotely. A device affected by this method remains recoverable: the bootloader operates independently of the application firmware and can reload known-good, CubeSpace-supplied images, so an affected unit cannot be permanently disabled by this method. Starting with firmware version 5.0.20, CubeSpace offers optional cryptographic secure boot of varying security levels which customers can enable. Given the physical-access prerequisite and the availability of recovery, CubeSpace assesses the practical risk as low. Relevant CWE: CWE-347 Improper Verification of Cryptographic Signature Metrics CVSS Version Base Score Base Severity Vector String 3.1 6.1 MEDIUM CVSS:3.1/AV:P/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:H/A:H 4.0 3.3 LOW CVSS:4.0/AV:P/AC:L/AT:N/PR:N/UI:N/VC:N/VI:H/VA:H/SC:N/SI:N/SA:N/E:P Acknowledgments Anthony Rose reported this vulnerability to CISA Legal Notice and Terms of Use This product is provided subject to this Notification (https://www.cisa.gov/notification) and this Privacy & Use policy (https://www.cisa.gov/privacy-policy). Recommended Practices CISA recommends users take defensive measures to minimize the risk of exploitation of this vulnerability. Minimize network exposure for all control system devices and/or systems, ensuring they are not accessible from the internet. Locate control system networks and remote devices behind firewalls and isolating them from business networks. When remote access is required, use more secure methods, such as Virtual Private Networks (VPNs), recognizing VPNs may have vulnerabilities and should be updated to the most current version available. Also recognize VPN is only as secure as the connected devices. CISA reminds organizations to perform proper impact analysis and risk assessment prior to deploying defensive measures. CISA also provides a section for control systems security recommended practices on the ICS webpage on cisa.gov/ics. Several CISA products detailing cyber defense best practices are available for reading and download, including Improving Industrial Control Systems Cybersecurity with Defense-in-Depth Strategies. CISA encourages organizations to implement recommended cybersecurity strategies for proactive defense of ICS assets. Additional mitigation guidance and recommended practices are publicly available on the ICS webpage at cisa.gov/ics in the technical information paper, ICS-TIP-12-146-01B--Targeted Cyber Intrusion Detection and Mitigation Strategies. Organizations observing suspected malicious activity should follow established internal procedures and report findings to CISA for tracking and correlation against other incidents. CISA also recommends users take the following measures to protect themselves from social engineering attacks: Do not click web links or open attachments in unsolicited email messages. Refer to Recognizing and Avoiding Email Scams for more information on avoiding email scams. Refer to Avoiding Social Engineering and Phishing Attacks for more information on social engineering attacks. No known public exploitation specifically targeting this vulnerability has been reported to CISA at this time. This vulnerability is not exploitable remotely. Revision History Initial Release Date: 2026-07-02 Date Revision Summary 2026-07-02 1 Initial Publication Legal Notice and Terms of Use

    Why it matters: Raises security risk for users and organizations.
  • OpenAI and Anthropic Limit New AI Models to Trump-Approved Customers During Cybersecurity Review

    SecurityWeek Article posted: June 29, 2026 3 views
    Story Summary

    ChatGPT maker OpenAI said Friday it is restricting the release of its new artificial intelligence model at the request of President Donald Trump’s administration. The post OpenAI and Anthropic Limit New AI Models to Trump-Approved Customers During Cybersecurity Review appeared first on SecurityWeek .

    Why it matters: AI progress resets what products and jobs look like.
  • OpenAI Unveils GPT-5.6 Sol as Its Most Advanced Cybersecurity AI

    SecurityWeek Article posted: June 29, 2026 3 views
    Story Summary

    The company says Sol matches competing systems like Mythos Preview while using only a third of the output tokens. The post OpenAI Unveils GPT-5.6 Sol as Its Most Advanced Cybersecurity AI appeared first on SecurityWeek .

    Why it matters: AI progress resets what products and jobs look like.
  • New Java-Based QuimaRAT MaaS Built to Run on Windows, Linux, and macOS

    The Hacker News Article posted: 1h 30m ago
    Story Summary

    Cybersecurity researchers have flagged a novel Java-based remote access trojan (RAT) called QuimaRAT that's capable of targeting Windows, Linux, and macOS environments. According to LevelBlue, the cross-platform malware is advertised under a malware-as-a-service (MaaS) model, costing anywhere between $150 for one month to $1,200 for lifetime access. Other s…

    Why it matters: Raises security risk for users and organizations.
  • Stressors, AI Forcing Changes to Cybersecurity Teams

    Dark Reading Article posted: June 19, 2026 71 views
    Story Summary

    As threats proliferate and AI complicates cybersecurity, CISOs say the job is getting harder, but more companies still want cybersecurity expertise, if even on a part-time basis.

    Why it matters: AI progress resets what products and jobs look like.