• How AI Changes Secure Code Review

    Secure code review has always required more than finding obvious injection bugs or checking whether a developer used the right library call. Good review connects code behavior to trust boundaries, data flow, authorization logic, state changes, error handling, deployment context, and abuse cases. AI does not remove that requirement. It changes the volume, speed, source, and shape of the code entering the review process.

    AI coding assistants can generate handlers, tests, infrastructure files, database queries, IAM policies, Kubernetes manifests, documentation, and deployment scripts in minutes. That changes the risk profile of pull requests. A reviewer may no longer be assessing code that reflects a developer’s full reasoning process. They may be assessing code that was assembled from model suggestions, partial prompts, copied snippets, generated fixes, and tool-driven refactors.

    The result is a new secure code review problem: code can look complete, pass tests, follow style rules, and still contain subtle flaws introduced by an assistant that does not truly know the organization’s threat model, production architecture, security controls, or abuse history. AI can speed development, but it can also increase the amount of security-relevant code that reaches review without the same level of human design intent behind it.


    AI changes the reviewer’s starting assumption

    Traditional review often starts with the assumption that a human developer made a set of deliberate implementation choices. The reviewer looks for mistakes in those choices: missing input validation, broken access control, unsafe deserialization, weak cryptography, race conditions, insecure defaults, or risky dependency use.

    AI-generated code changes that assumption. Some code may be technically correct in isolation but wrong for the system it enters. A model may generate an authorization check that matches a common pattern but ignores tenant boundaries. It may use a secure-looking encryption API with poor key management. It may create a helper function that validates syntax but not authorization. It may add retry logic that hides failed security events. It may produce tests that confirm happy-path behavior but never test malicious input.

    That means secure review has to ask a different opening question: “What did the model assume?” The answer is rarely visible in the diff. AI-generated code often arrives without the prompt, rejected options, hidden context, or tradeoffs that shaped the final output. A reviewer sees the artifact, not the reasoning chain that produced it.

    This makes design intent more valuable. Pull requests that include AI-generated security-relevant code should explain what the code is meant to protect, what inputs are trusted, what inputs are hostile, what privilege level the code runs with, what data it can reach, and what failure mode is acceptable. Without that context, AI-generated code can create a false sense of review coverage.


    The main risk is not bad syntax

    AI coding tools are usually good at producing plausible syntax. That is part of the problem. The code often looks clean enough to move past superficial review. The risky parts are more likely to appear in security semantics.

    An assistant may generate SQL parameterization correctly in one part of an application, then concatenate query fragments in a reporting function. It may correctly escape HTML in a template, then pass untrusted content through a markdown renderer or client-side sink. It may use JWT validation code, but fail to enforce issuer, audience, expiration, key rotation, or algorithm restrictions. It may check that a user is authenticated, but fail to check that the user can access the specific object being requested.

    Generated code can also normalize insecure defaults. Examples include permissive CORS settings, overbroad IAM policies, disabled TLS verification, weak random number generation, hardcoded secrets in test fixtures that later become real examples, broad exception handlers, verbose error messages, debug endpoints, and temporary bypass logic left in place.

    Secure review in the AI-assisted SDLC has to treat “looks reasonable” as a weak signal. The reviewer’s job is to validate security behavior against concrete attacker actions, not to grade code fluency.

    AI increases the amount of code that needs context-aware review

    Code review has always had a throughput problem. Teams can produce code faster than security teams can manually inspect it. AI makes that gap wider. More code can be generated, more refactors can be proposed, and more files can change in a single pull request.

    This has two effects. First, reviewers face larger diffs with less time to reason through them. Second, low-friction code generation can lead to more security-sensitive changes made by developers who are not domain specialists in that area.

    A frontend developer might ask an assistant to add an API route. A backend developer might ask for Terraform. A platform engineer might generate a GitHub Actions workflow. A junior developer might ask for OAuth integration code. Each of these tasks can cross trust boundaries. The assistant can produce usable code, but usable code is not the same as secure code.

    The secure review process must adjust by classifying AI-assisted changes by risk. A generated unit test does not carry the same risk as a generated authentication middleware. A generated README update is not the same as a generated IAM policy. Teams need review triggers for security-sensitive files and patterns: auth code, crypto, identity claims, secrets handling, logging, deserialization, payment logic, object access, tenant isolation, CI/CD workflows, infrastructure definitions, container permissions, Kubernetes RBAC, and dependency changes.


    AI can help review, but it cannot own review

    AI review tools can be useful in the first pass. They can summarize diffs, flag suspicious functions, identify missing tests, compare code to internal patterns, explain complex changes, and draft questions for human reviewers. They can also help security teams scale routine checks by identifying risky areas in a large pull request.

    The limitation is that AI review is probabilistic and context-bound. It may miss serious flaws that require system-level reasoning. It may focus on style or minor correctness issues rather than exploitability. It may give confident comments on code it has not fully interpreted. It may fail to account for downstream controls, compensating controls, hidden dependencies, or production-specific data flows.

    Secure code review should use AI as a review assistant, not a reviewer of record. The human reviewer still owns the acceptance decision for security-relevant changes. Automated AI comments should be treated like SAST findings, lint findings, or dependency alerts: useful signal, not final judgment.

    A practical review workflow uses AI to improve coverage, then routes high-risk changes to humans with the right expertise. The AI can summarize “what changed,” “which files affect authentication,” “where user-controlled input enters,” or “which new permissions are requested.” The human reviewer decides whether the design is safe.


    Generated fixes need review too

    AI tools are increasingly used to remediate findings. A scanner reports SQL injection, an assistant proposes parameterization. A dependency alert appears, an assistant updates the package. A SAST finding flags path traversal, an assistant adds path normalization. These workflows can reduce remediation time, but generated fixes can create new failure modes.

    A generated fix may patch the visible sink but leave another path open. It may validate input too late. It may break backward compatibility in a way that causes teams to disable the control. It may introduce a denylist instead of a safer allowlist. It may catch exceptions and return generic success, hiding failures from logs. It may upgrade a package without reviewing breaking security-relevant behavior. It may add tests that prove the patched sample no longer works, but not test the broader class of exploit.

    Every generated security fix should be reviewed as a security change, not treated as an automatic scanner response. The reviewer should ask whether the root cause was fixed, whether the fix applies at the right layer, whether tests cover the vulnerability class, whether the patch changes authorization or data exposure, and whether the finding can recur elsewhere.


    AI makes prompt and context part of the security boundary

    Secure code review now has to account for inputs that do not live in application code. AI assistants take context from prompts, open files, repository instructions, issue comments, documentation, README files, tool output, terminal output, dependency metadata, and sometimes external systems connected through plugins or MCP servers.

    That context can be malicious or misleading. A repository can contain instructions that tell an assistant to ignore security checks. A README can include prompt injection content. A generated file can influence the next AI-assisted change. A tool response can be crafted to steer the assistant into leaking secrets or making unsafe edits. A compromised dependency page can influence generated remediation guidance.

    For AI-assisted development, secure review should include the environment around the code. Teams should review assistant instruction files, repository-level prompts, agent permissions, tool integrations, local workspace access, secret exposure, and which external systems the assistant can query or modify. An AI coding agent with repository write access, terminal access, browser access, and secrets access is no longer a passive autocomplete tool. It is an automation actor inside the development environment.

    That changes review scope. Security teams need policies for which agents can modify code, which branches they can write to, which workflows they can trigger, which secrets they can access, and what approvals are required before generated changes merge.


    The new review target: AI-shaped pull requests

    A pull request affected by AI often has certain traits. It may touch many files with consistent formatting. It may introduce generic helper abstractions. It may include comments that describe obvious behavior. It may contain tests that mirror implementation logic too closely. It may use APIs that are common in public examples but misaligned with internal patterns. It may refactor working security code into cleaner but weaker code.

    Reviewers should look for these AI-shaped issues:

    • Generated authorization code that checks identity but not object ownership.
    • Input validation placed at the edge but bypassed by internal callers.
    • Logging that captures sensitive request data, tokens, session identifiers, or personal data.
    • Error handling that returns too much information or suppresses security-relevant failures.
    • New dependencies added for small tasks that could be handled internally.
    • Infrastructure permissions that use wildcards or broad managed roles.
    • Client-side checks used as if they were server-side enforcement.
    • Secrets inserted into examples, tests, scripts, Docker files, or CI variables.
    • Security tests that only prove the generated implementation works, not that attacks fail.
    • Code comments that sound authoritative but do not match the implementation.
    • These are not AI-only flaws. AI raises their frequency and makes them easier to introduce at scale.

    Secure review must become more data-flow driven

    AI-generated code is often local in appearance. It may add one route, one helper, one workflow file, or one configuration block. The security impact is rarely local. A secure review should trace data across boundaries.

    For each AI-assisted change, reviewers should identify the input source, trust level, transformation logic, authorization decision, storage location, outbound call, and output sink. This matters more than the specific language or framework.

    For example, a generated file upload function should be reviewed across the entire path: client-supplied filename, content type, size limit, extension handling, malware scanning, storage bucket permissions, metadata handling, public access flags, CDN behavior, logging, retention, and deletion. A generated API route should be reviewed across authentication, object lookup, tenant boundary, field-level authorization, serialization, caching, error messages, and audit logging.

    AI can help build that map, but human reviewers need to verify it. The main security question is not “is this function written cleanly?” It is “can an attacker use this path to cross a boundary?”


    AI also changes supply chain review

    AI-assisted code review is not limited to application logic. Assistants often recommend packages, generate package manager commands, update lockfiles, write Dockerfiles, configure CI/CD workflows, and produce infrastructure code.

    That makes supply chain review more significant. A model may choose an abandoned package, a typo-squatted package, a package with risky transitive dependencies, or a dependency that is far larger than the task requires. It may generate a Dockerfile that runs as root, uses a broad base image, disables certificate checks, pins nothing, or pulls scripts from the internet during build. It may create CI workflows that run untrusted pull request code with secrets available.

    Secure review should treat AI-suggested dependencies and build changes as high-risk until validated. Reviewers should check package reputation, maintenance status, license, version pinning, known vulnerabilities, transitive risk, build scripts, install hooks, and whether the dependency is necessary. For CI/CD, reviewers should inspect token permissions, event triggers, secret exposure, third-party actions, pinned action SHAs, artifact handling, and deployment gates.

    AI can write infrastructure faster than most teams can review it. That means infrastructure-as-code and pipeline changes need strict review ownership.


    AI affects secure coding standards

    Most secure coding standards were written for human-authored code. They list approved libraries, banned functions, validation patterns, logging rules, crypto requirements, and review gates. AI requires these standards to become machine-usable.

    If teams want AI review tools to support secure development, the standards must be explicit, testable, and available in the places the assistant reads. Vague guidance such as “use secure authentication” is weak. Better guidance says which middleware to use, which claims are required, how tenant ID must be enforced, which libraries are banned, how secrets must be loaded, which logging fields are prohibited, and which files require security review.

    This creates a new kind of security artifact: review instructions for AI-assisted development. These instructions should not be treated as magic. They should be version-controlled, reviewed, tested, and scoped by path. Instructions for Terraform are different from instructions for React. Instructions for authentication code are different from instructions for test utilities.

    Security teams should build small, precise review rules that map to known internal failure modes. For example: “No new cloud role may include wildcard resource access without a linked exception.” “All API handlers that load objects by ID must call the tenant authorization helper before returning data.” “Do not log authorization headers, cookies, session IDs, reset tokens, or API keys.” These rules help AI tools produce better comments and help human reviewers stay consistent.


    Reviewers need to inspect AI-generated tests

    AI-generated tests can be helpful, but they can also create shallow confidence. A model often writes tests that confirm the code does what the code was written to do. Security testing needs to prove that unsafe behavior is rejected.

    For generated code touching security boundaries, reviewers should look for negative tests. Authentication code should test missing, malformed, expired, and wrong-audience tokens. Authorization code should test cross-tenant access, object ownership violations, role downgrades, and privilege boundaries. Input handling code should test malicious payloads, nested encodings, oversized input, null bytes, Unicode edge cases, path traversal, SSRF targets, and injection strings. File handling should test content-type mismatch, extension tricks, archive bombs, and storage permission failures.

    Tests should also check logging behavior, error messages, and side effects. A failed authorization test should not write data. A rejected upload should not leave a public object behind. A failed payment action should not trigger fulfillment. AI can generate these tests, but the reviewer has to ask for abuse cases rather than accept happy-path coverage.


    Accountability cannot be automated away

    One of the most serious risks in AI-assisted review is responsibility drift. Developers may assume the AI reviewer caught security issues. Security teams may assume developers reviewed AI output. Managers may assume the tool reduced risk due to more comments and faster pull request cycles. No one may own the final security judgment.

    The process must assign clear responsibility. Developers remain responsible for code they submit. Human reviewers remain responsible for approvals. Security teams remain responsible for standards, tooling, and high-risk review paths. AI-generated comments are supporting material.

    Pull request templates should ask whether AI was used for security-sensitive code, whether generated code was modified, whether new dependencies were added, whether secrets or permissions changed, and whether negative security tests were included. This is not about blocking AI. It is about making review context visible.

    For mature teams, AI usage metadata can become part of the SDLC record. Security teams can track which repositories use AI-generated code, which types of changes are most common, which findings recur, which generated fixes were accepted, and where review failures reach production. That data can improve secure coding rules, training, and detection.


    A practical secure review model for AI-assisted code

    Secure code review in the AI era should have layered gates.

    The first gate is developer-side review before the pull request. Developers should scan generated code locally, remove unused code, validate dependencies, check secrets, run tests, and document security-relevant assumptions. Generated code should never be pasted directly into production paths without local inspection.

    The second gate is automated security analysis. SAST, SCA, IaC scanning, secret scanning, container scanning, policy-as-code, and CI/CD workflow analysis should run on every relevant change. AI can help explain findings or suggest patches, but scanner output remains a separate signal.

    The third gate is AI-assisted review. The AI reviewer can summarize high-risk files, compare changes to secure coding rules, flag missing tests, and identify suspicious patterns. This gate is useful for coverage and triage.

    The fourth gate is human review. Humans should own approval for high-risk areas: authentication, authorization, crypto, identity, payments, audit logging, secrets, deployment, cloud permissions, exposed APIs, data export, and tenant isolation.

    The fifth gate is post-merge monitoring. Some issues only appear in runtime behavior. Teams should monitor security logs, rejected authorization attempts, new error patterns, unusual API use, dependency behavior, cloud role usage, and secret access after major AI-assisted changes.

    This model treats AI as one control in a layered review process. It does not give AI final authority over secure code.


    What security teams should change now

    Security teams do not need to ban AI coding tools to manage the risk. They need to update secure code review so it reflects how code is now produced.

    Start by defining which code paths require human security review. Then update pull request templates to surface AI use in high-risk changes. Add repository instructions that encode internal secure coding rules. Build detections for AI-shaped risks such as broad permissions, hardcoded secrets, unsafe generated workflows, and dependency sprawl. Train reviewers to ask what the model assumed, what context it lacked, and where the generated code crosses a trust boundary.

    Security teams should also review the AI tools themselves. That includes data retention settings, model access, repository access, agent permissions, local IDE integrations, MCP servers, plugin access, secret exposure, and audit logs. A coding assistant with write access and tool access should be governed like a development automation system.

    The long-term shift is clear: secure code review is no longer limited to reviewing code. It now includes reviewing generated context, assistant permissions, AI-produced fixes, review instructions, and the automation path that created the change.

    AI can make secure code review faster and broader, but it also raises the cost of shallow approval. The organizations that benefit most will not be the ones that let AI approve more code. They will be the ones that use AI to expose more risk before a human signs off.


    How Can Netizen Help?

    Founded in 2013, Netizen is an award-winning technology firm that develops and leverages cutting-edge solutions to create a more secure, integrated, and automated digital environment for government, defense, and commercial clients worldwide. Our innovative solutions transform complex cybersecurity and technology challenges into strategic advantages by delivering mission-critical capabilities that safeguard and optimize clients’ digital infrastructure. One example of this is our popular “CISO-as-a-Service” offering that enables organizations of any size to access executive level cybersecurity expertise at a fraction of the cost of hiring internally. 

    Netizen also operates a state-of-the-art 24x7x365 Security Operations Center (SOC) that delivers comprehensive cybersecurity monitoring solutions for defense, government, and commercial clients. Our service portfolio includes cybersecurity assessments and advisory, hosted SIEM and EDR/XDR solutions, software assurance, penetration testing, cybersecurity engineering, and compliance audit support. We specialize in serving organizations that operate within some of the world’s most highly sensitive and tightly regulated environments where unwavering security, strict compliance, technical excellence, and operational maturity are non-negotiable requirements. Our proven track record in these domains positions us as the premier trusted partner for organizations where technology reliability and security cannot be compromised.

    Netizen holds ISO 27001, ISO 9001, ISO 20000-1, and CMMI Level III SVC registrations demonstrating the maturity of our operations. We are a proud Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) certified by U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) that has been named multiple times to the Inc. 5000 and Vet 100 lists of the most successful and fastest-growing private companies in the nation. Netizen has also been named a national “Best Workplace” by Inc. Magazine, a multiple awardee of the U.S. Department of Labor HIRE Vets Platinum Medallion for veteran hiring and retention, the Lehigh Valley Business of the Year and Veteran-Owned Business of the Year, and the recipient of dozens of other awards and accolades for innovation, community support, working environment, and growth.

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  • The Security Risks Hidden in Service Accounts

    Service accounts sit at the intersection of identity, application runtime, infrastructure automation, and privileged access. They run Windows services, connect middleware to databases, let pipelines deploy code, let SaaS applications read tenant data, and allow workloads in cloud and Kubernetes environments to call APIs without a person at the keyboard. That operational value also makes them high-value attack paths.

    A compromised service account rarely looks like a compromised employee account. It may have no mailbox, no MFA challenge, no interactive login history, no single owner, and no clean joiner, mover, or leaver trigger. It can keep working for years with the same credential, long after the application, administrator, or deployment model that justified it has changed.

    The security issue is ambient authority. A service account often carries standing rights at the point where business logic and infrastructure control meet. An account that was created to read one database may later gain write access to queues, file shares, secret stores, backups, cloud APIs, deployment tooling, and directory groups. Over time, the account becomes a reusable identity object with a larger blast radius than anyone intended.


    Why service accounts become high-value attack paths

    Service accounts are attractive to attackers for four reasons: persistence, privilege, weak attribution, and weak controls.

    Persistence comes from long-lived credentials. Many service accounts are created with non-expiring passwords, static access keys, manually generated client secrets, or certificates that are rarely reviewed. This gives an attacker a durable credential that can survive password resets for human users, endpoint reimaging, and even partial incident response actions.

    Privilege comes from operational convenience. A broken service account can take down an application, so teams often over-grant access to avoid outages. Database accounts get schema owner rights. Windows service accounts get local administrator access. Cloud automation principals get contributor or administrator roles. CI/CD identities get deployment authority across multiple environments. Kubernetes service accounts get broad namespace or cluster permissions. These choices reduce operational friction, then become privilege escalation paths.

    Weak attribution comes from shared execution. A log entry showing that a service account accessed a secret, modified a storage bucket, created a process, or deployed code does not always identify the developer, administrator, workload, runner, or compromised host that caused the action. This creates a non-repudiation gap. The service account becomes the visible principal, but the real initiator may sit several layers away.

    Weak controls come from identity programs that focus on employees. Human identities usually have lifecycle workflows, MFA, conditional access, access reviews, HR triggers, device signals, and user behavior analytics. Service accounts often sit outside that control plane. They may be exempted from password rotation, excluded from MFA, ignored by access reviews, and filtered out of anomaly detection rules to reduce alert noise.


    Active Directory: Kerberoasting, delegation, and local privilege

    In Active Directory environments, one of the most common risks is the SPN-backed user account. A domain user can request a Kerberos service ticket for a registered Service Principal Name. The returned ticket is encrypted with a key derived from the target account’s password. An attacker can take that ticket offline and attempt to crack it. This is the core Kerberoasting pattern.

    Kerberoasting is effective since it abuses legitimate Kerberos behavior. The attacker does not need administrative rights to request service tickets. The activity can appear as normal ticket issuance, especially in environments with large numbers of applications, SQL services, IIS services, backup platforms, and middleware systems. The risk grows when the target service account has a weak password, a non-expiring password, RC4-HMAC support, privileged group membership, or rights that lead to administrative control over servers.

    Detection should focus on service ticket behavior, encryption type, and account risk. Windows Event ID 4769 is central for service ticket requests. Analysts should watch for unusual request volume from one source, ticket requests for many SPNs in a short period, RC4 ticket encryption type 0x17, requests for high-value service accounts, and service accounts with stale passwords. Directory attributes such as servicePrincipalName, pwdLastSet, adminCount, msDS-SupportedEncryptionTypes, delegation flags, group membership, and local administrator exposure should be joined with Kerberos telemetry.

    Kerberoasting is one part of the issue. Service accounts with local administrator rights can support lateral movement across server tiers. If the same service account runs on many hosts, credential material obtained from one system can unlock others. If that account can access backups, hypervisors, deployment shares, or domain management tooling, the attacker may move from application compromise to infrastructure control.

    Delegation settings add more risk. Unconstrained delegation can expose user tickets on a compromised service host, including tickets from privileged users that authenticate to the service. Constrained delegation and resource-based constrained delegation reduce scope, but misconfiguration can still create impersonation paths. Service account review should include delegation settings, SPNs, sensitive account flags, admin tier alignment, and host placement.

    The safer Windows pattern is to move eligible workloads to Group Managed Service Accounts or delegated managed service account models where supported. These models reduce manual password handling, provide automatic password management, and restrict which machines can retrieve and use the account credential. For accounts that cannot migrate, passwords should be long, random, unique, rotated, audited for exposure, and configured to support stronger Kerberos encryption.


    Cloud workload identities: secret sprawl and entitlement drift

    Cloud environments change the failure mode. The main risk is less about cracking a password and more about who can mint, store, use, or impersonate a machine identity.

    In Microsoft Entra ID, workload identities include applications, service principals, and managed identities. Application permissions can grant app-only access to Microsoft Graph, Azure resources, SaaS APIs, or internal services without a user session. A service principal with permissions such as Application.ReadWrite.All, Directory.ReadWrite.All, AppRoleAssignment.ReadWrite.All, RoleManagement.ReadWrite.Directory, or broad subscription ownership can become a tenant-level escalation point. A leaked client secret or certificate can give an attacker direct access as the app. A poorly governed consent grant can let an external or internal application read mail, files, directory objects, or security data at scale.

    Managed identities reduce developer-managed secrets, but they do not remove the need for authorization governance. A managed identity attached to a virtual machine, function, automation account, or container workload still has effective permissions. If an attacker gains execution in that workload, the identity can become an access bridge to Key Vault, storage, databases, management APIs, or deployment systems.

    AWS environments face a related issue with long-lived IAM user access keys. Static keys are frequently exposed through source code, build logs, Terraform state, shell history, container images, CI variables, endpoint files, and third-party integrations. Once exposed, an access key can be used from outside the original workload context. Roles and short-lived credentials reduce this risk, especially when combined with conditions that bind access to source account, source ARN, external ID, session tags, device context, or OIDC claims.

    Google Cloud service accounts carry two roles in the security model: they are principals that can access resources, and they are resources that other users or workloads may be allowed to impersonate. This dual nature is easy to miss. A user who can create a key for a privileged service account, grant themselves token creator rights, or modify the service account’s allow policy may effectively grant themselves the service account’s access. Default service accounts add more risk when broad roles are inherited from older project settings.

    Across cloud providers, the most dangerous pattern is a service account that combines static credentials, broad permissions, and weak source restrictions. The practical control is to reduce or remove static secrets, use workload-native identity where possible, scope permissions to one function or deployment boundary, and log both the service account action and the caller that obtained the token.


    Kubernetes and CI/CD: service account tokens in the automation plane

    Kubernetes service accounts create identities for pod processes. If a pod has a mounted service account token and an attacker gains code execution inside the container, that token can be used against the Kubernetes API subject to RBAC. The impact depends on the permissions attached to that service account. A read-only token may expose secrets, pod specs, config maps, service discovery data, or workload metadata. A privileged token may allow pod creation, secret retrieval, role binding changes, node access, or deployment modification.

    Modern Kubernetes supports time-bound tokens through the TokenRequest API and projected volumes. These tokens are bound to a pod and audience, with a default lifespan of one hour in common configurations. Legacy long-lived token secrets are more dangerous since they can remain usable beyond the pod lifecycle. Security teams should audit namespaces for service accounts with automounted tokens, legacy token secrets, broad RoleBindings or ClusterRoleBindings, and unexpected access to secrets.

    CI/CD systems are another service account concentration point. Build runners often hold the authority to pull source code, read secrets, build containers, push images, deploy infrastructure, modify Kubernetes objects, assume cloud roles, and trigger production workflows. A compromised pipeline identity can move from repository to registry to runtime without touching a human account.

    The preferred pattern is federated workload identity from the CI/CD system to the cloud provider, using OIDC claims tied to repository, branch, environment, workflow, and approval state. Static cloud keys in CI/CD variables should be treated as high-risk exceptions. Each runner should have narrow permissions, clear environment boundaries, strong secret isolation, and logs that correlate the cloud action back to the pipeline run, commit, actor, and approval event.


    SaaS integrations and API service accounts

    Service accounts are no longer limited to operating systems and cloud infrastructure. SaaS platforms commonly rely on API users, OAuth applications, integration users, bot users, admin tokens, webhook secrets, SCIM tokens, and automation accounts. These identities often have durable access to CRM data, ticketing systems, HR records, mailboxes, collaboration platforms, security tooling, and finance systems.

    The risk is often hidden in consent and token scope. An OAuth application may have read access to all mailboxes or files. A ticketing integration may have permission to create users or reset workflows. A security automation account may have the ability to isolate hosts or close alerts. A backup integration may have access to large volumes of sensitive data. These permissions can be valid for business reasons, yet still create a direct path for mass data access if the token is stolen.

    SaaS service account review should include token age, last use, scopes, admin role assignments, IP restrictions, source application, owner, vendor, downstream data access, and revocation process. For high-risk integrations, teams should prefer scoped OAuth grants, certificate-based authentication, conditional access controls where supported, short token lifetimes, vendor access reviews, and dedicated monitoring for bulk export, mass read, privilege change, and configuration drift.


    Detection logic that actually works

    Service account monitoring fails when it treats all machine activity as expected background noise. A better model separates detection into five planes: inventory, authentication, authorization, runtime, and change.

    The inventory plane asks whether every service account is known, owned, justified, and mapped to a workload. It should track name, platform, owner, business service, credential type, storage location, last authentication, last permission use, privilege level, delegated rights, dependencies, and decommission date. Unknown service accounts should be treated as unresolved access debt.

    The authentication plane looks at where and how the account is used. In Windows, this includes service logons, scheduled task execution, Kerberos service ticket requests, interactive logon attempts, remote logons, and use from hosts outside the expected server set. In cloud environments, it includes source IP, user agent, token issuer, key ID, assumed role session, service principal sign-in, OAuth grant usage, and API call geography. In Kubernetes, it includes audit events where user.username maps to system:serviceaccount:<namespace>:<name>.

    The authorization plane compares assigned permissions with used permissions. High-value signals include unused high-risk rights, service accounts with administrator roles, app-only permissions across tenant data, ability to create or modify credentials, ability to impersonate other service accounts, ability to read secret stores, and cross-environment deployment rights. Effective privilege matters more than assigned role names.

    The runtime plane links service account activity to processes, containers, hosts, pods, pipelines, and workloads. A service account used from a new host, a new pod, an unusual runner, or an unrecognized automation tool deserves attention. A credential used outside its normal execution boundary is often a stronger signal than the API call itself.

    The change plane watches for modifications that increase future access. This includes new SPNs, new client secrets, new certificates, new access keys, new OAuth grants, new role assignments, new service account token secrets, delegation changes, modified trust policies, added group membership, and changes to conditional access exclusions. Many service account compromises start with a credential leak, then mature into persistence through new credentials or expanded grants.


    Hardening service accounts without breaking production

    The first step is inventory. No team can secure service accounts it cannot name. Inventory should come from multiple systems: Active Directory, Entra ID, cloud IAM, Kubernetes clusters, CI/CD platforms, secret stores, SaaS admin consoles, endpoint telemetry, SIEM logs, and configuration management. Naming conventions help, but discovery should not rely on naming alone.

    The second step is ownership. Each service account needs a technical owner, business owner, supported workload, contact path, and review cadence. Orphaned accounts should lose access or enter a quarantine process. Accounts tied to retired applications should be disabled before deletion so hidden dependencies can surface with less risk.

    The third step is secret reduction. Replace static credentials with platform-managed identity wherever practical. In Active Directory, use managed service account models for supported Windows workloads. In Azure, prefer managed identities or workload identity federation. In AWS, prefer IAM roles and short-lived STS credentials over IAM user access keys. In Google Cloud, prefer service account impersonation or attached service accounts without downloaded keys. In Kubernetes, use projected, time-bound tokens and disable automounting where the pod does not need API access. In CI/CD, use OIDC federation rather than static cloud keys.

    The fourth step is privilege decomposition. A single service account should not span development, test, and production. It should not combine database access, secret access, deployment rights, and directory rights. Break large identities into workload-specific identities, then scope each identity to the smallest resource set that supports the application path. Separate read, write, deploy, administer, and break-glass functions.

    The fifth step is conditional control. Restrict where service accounts can authenticate from. Bind cloud roles to source conditions. Limit service principal sign-ins by location where supported. Limit IAM role assumption by external ID, organization ID, repository claim, branch claim, or workload identity claim. Restrict Kubernetes service account use through namespace boundaries, admission policy, network policy, and RBAC. Deny interactive logon for Windows service accounts, and remove local administrator rights where they are not required.

    The sixth step is rotation and revocation. Static credentials that remain in use should have documented exceptions, expiration dates, rotation schedules, and emergency revocation procedures. Rotation should be tested. Many organizations discover during an incident that a service account password cannot be changed without breaking an application that no one owns. That is not a credential problem; it is an operational resilience problem.

    The seventh step is detection engineering. Build detections around account behavior, entitlement change, and source boundary violations. Good alerts include a service account used from a new host, a service principal receiving a new secret, a cloud key used from a new country, a Kubernetes service account creating privileged pods, a CI/CD deploy role used outside approved workflow claims, an AD service account requesting RC4 tickets, and a service account added to a privileged group.


    The real risk is unmanaged trust

    Service accounts are often treated as background plumbing, but they are active security principals. They authenticate, authorize, move data, deploy software, change infrastructure, and bridge trust between systems. In many environments, they now outnumber human accounts and hold access that would be unacceptable if assigned to a standard user.

    The defense is identity engineering. Every service account should be named, owned, scoped, observed, and replaceable. Every static secret should have a reason to exist. Every privilege should map to a workload requirement. Every action should be traceable back to a source system, host, pipeline, or human sponsor.

    The safest service account is often the one that no longer has a static secret, no longer has standing broad access, and no longer sits outside the normal identity governance process. Attackers know service accounts are durable access paths. Defenders need to treat them with the same scrutiny given to privileged human accounts, and in many cases, more.


    How Can Netizen Help?

    Founded in 2013, Netizen is an award-winning technology firm that develops and leverages cutting-edge solutions to create a more secure, integrated, and automated digital environment for government, defense, and commercial clients worldwide. Our innovative solutions transform complex cybersecurity and technology challenges into strategic advantages by delivering mission-critical capabilities that safeguard and optimize clients’ digital infrastructure. One example of this is our popular “CISO-as-a-Service” offering that enables organizations of any size to access executive level cybersecurity expertise at a fraction of the cost of hiring internally. 

    Netizen also operates a state-of-the-art 24x7x365 Security Operations Center (SOC) that delivers comprehensive cybersecurity monitoring solutions for defense, government, and commercial clients. Our service portfolio includes cybersecurity assessments and advisory, hosted SIEM and EDR/XDR solutions, software assurance, penetration testing, cybersecurity engineering, and compliance audit support. We specialize in serving organizations that operate within some of the world’s most highly sensitive and tightly regulated environments where unwavering security, strict compliance, technical excellence, and operational maturity are non-negotiable requirements. Our proven track record in these domains positions us as the premier trusted partner for organizations where technology reliability and security cannot be compromised.

    Netizen holds ISO 27001, ISO 9001, ISO 20000-1, and CMMI Level III SVC registrations demonstrating the maturity of our operations. We are a proud Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) certified by U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) that has been named multiple times to the Inc. 5000 and Vet 100 lists of the most successful and fastest-growing private companies in the nation. Netizen has also been named a national “Best Workplace” by Inc. Magazine, a multiple awardee of the U.S. Department of Labor HIRE Vets Platinum Medallion for veteran hiring and retention, the Lehigh Valley Business of the Year and Veteran-Owned Business of the Year, and the recipient of dozens of other awards and accolades for innovation, community support, working environment, and growth.

    Looking for expert guidance to secure, automate, and streamline your IT infrastructure and operations? Start the conversation today.


  • The Difference Between Passing a SOC 2 Audit and Maintaining a SOC 2 Program

    For many organizations, SOC 2 begins as a customer request. A prospect asks for the report, a contract requires it, or a sales cycle stalls until the organization can prove that it has controls in place to protect customer data. That pressure often turns SOC 2 into a project with a deadline, an audit window, evidence requests, policy updates, and a final report.

    That approach may get an organization through the audit, but it does not necessarily create a mature compliance program. Passing a SOC 2 audit and maintaining a SOC 2 program are related goals, but they are not the same. One produces an attestation report for a defined period. The other builds repeatable governance, risk management, control ownership, and operational discipline into the way the organization runs.

    SOC 2 is built around the AICPA Trust Services Criteria, which address controls related to security, availability, processing integrity, confidentiality, and privacy. The exact scope depends on the services provided, the systems included, the risks facing the organization, and the trust service categories selected for the report. At a basic level, the audit asks whether management’s description of the system is accurate and whether the controls are suitably designed and operating as described.

    A SOC 2 program asks a broader question: can the organization keep those controls working after the auditor leaves?


    Passing the Audit Is a Point in the Compliance Lifecycle

    A SOC 2 audit is a formal examination. It has a defined scope, a defined set of systems, a defined audit period, and a defined body of evidence. For a Type I report, the focus is control design at a point in time. For a Type II report, the focus expands to control design and operating effectiveness over a period.

    That distinction matters. A Type I report may show that policies, procedures, and controls were in place on a selected date. A Type II report gives customers more assurance that those controls operated over time. Both can create business value. Both can support customer trust. Both can help satisfy vendor due diligence requirements.

    Still, an audit is an assessment of evidence. It is not a substitute for ownership. It does not automatically mean that access reviews will keep happening, terminated users will always be removed on time, vendors will be reassessed, risk decisions will be documented, incidents will be tested, or changes will be reviewed before deployment.

    Organizations that treat SOC 2 as a one-time event often scramble before the audit window closes. Policies get updated in bulk. Screenshots are collected manually. Control owners rush to document work that may have been performed inconsistently. Exceptions are handled reactively. The organization may still receive a report, but the process is inefficient and fragile.

    A mature SOC 2 program reduces that scramble by making compliance part of normal operations.


    Maintaining a Program Means Controls Have Owners

    The most significant difference between an audit and a program is accountability. In an audit-driven model, compliance often sits with one person or one small team. That team chases evidence, reminds departments to complete tasks, updates policies, and acts as the main interface with the auditor.

    In a program-driven model, compliance responsibilities are distributed across the business. Human resources owns onboarding and termination workflows. IT owns access provisioning, device management, and system hardening. Engineering owns change management and secure development practices. Security owns monitoring, vulnerability management, incident response, and risk tracking. Legal and procurement own vendor review and contractual obligations. Executive leadership owns governance, risk acceptance, and resourcing.

    This shift matters because SOC 2 controls usually reflect real business processes. If control owners do not understand their responsibilities, the organization may pass one audit cycle and fail to sustain the same control quality during the next one. A program requires named owners, documented procedures, recurring tasks, escalation paths, and management oversight.


    Evidence Should Be Produced by Operations, Not Reconstructed Later

    One of the clearest signs of an immature SOC 2 effort is evidence reconstruction. This happens when a team performs control activities informally, then tries to recreate proof later. Examples include backfilling access review notes, searching through ticketing systems for change approvals, manually pulling screenshots from cloud consoles, or trying to prove that security monitoring occurred months after the fact.

    A stronger program treats evidence as an output of the process itself. Access reviews are documented when they occur. Change approvals are captured in the ticket or pull request. Vulnerability remediation is tracked through the scanning and ticketing workflow. Security incidents, even minor ones, are logged with timestamps, impact, response actions, and closure notes. Vendor reviews are stored in a central repository with risk ratings and renewal dates.

    This does not mean compliance needs to slow down the business. It means the business should generate defensible records as work happens. The goal is to make audit evidence a byproduct of good operations, rather than a separate burden added at the end of the audit period.


    Policies Need to Match Reality

    Policies are often created early in a SOC 2 effort, but policies alone do not prove that a program is effective. A password policy, access control policy, change management policy, incident response plan, or vendor management policy only has value if it reflects how the organization actually works.

    A common issue in first-time audits is policy overreach. Organizations adopt generic policy language that sounds mature but does not match their size, tooling, staffing, or operating model. The result is a gap between documented expectations and actual practice. Auditors may test against the policy, and customers may rely on the report, so that gap can become a compliance risk.

    A maintainable SOC 2 program keeps policies practical, approved, reviewed, and aligned with real control activity. If the organization requires quarterly access reviews, those reviews need to happen every quarter. If all production changes require approval, the workflow needs to capture that approval. If critical vulnerabilities must be remediated within a defined timeframe, the vulnerability management process needs to track age, severity, risk decisions, and exceptions.

    A good policy is not the longest document. It is the document the organization can follow consistently.


    Risk Management Is More Than a Spreadsheet

    SOC 2 programs require risk awareness. The organization needs to know what systems support the service, what data is processed, who has access, what third parties are involved, what threats could disrupt operations, and what controls reduce those risks.

    In weaker programs, risk assessment is performed once a year to satisfy an audit request. The risk register is updated shortly before fieldwork, reviewed quickly, then ignored until the next cycle.

    In stronger programs, risk management drives decisions. New vendors trigger review. New products or features trigger security and privacy analysis. Major infrastructure changes are assessed before implementation. Control failures are tied back to risk. Accepted risks are documented with ownership and expiration dates. Leadership receives enough information to make informed decisions.

    This is where SOC 2 shifts from compliance paperwork to governance. A functioning program gives management a way to see control health, open risks, audit findings, recurring exceptions, and areas needing investment.


    Control Exceptions Should Lead to Corrective Action

    No program is perfect. Access reviews may be late. A terminated user may retain access longer than expected. A vulnerability may miss its remediation target. A vendor review may not be completed before renewal. An incident response test may reveal unclear roles.

    The issue is not that exceptions occur. The issue is whether the organization detects them, documents them, evaluates impact, and fixes the process that allowed them to happen.

    An audit-focused organization may treat exceptions as problems to explain away. A program-focused organization treats them as data. If access removals are late, the termination workflow may need better integration between HR and IT. If change approvals are missing, engineering workflows may need clearer enforcement. If vulnerability remediation is delayed, the organization may need ownership rules, risk-based prioritization, or better patch reporting.

    A SOC 2 program matures through this cycle: operate controls, detect failures, document exceptions, remediate root causes, and verify that the fix works.


    Automation Can Help, but It Cannot Own the Program

    Compliance automation platforms can reduce manual effort by collecting evidence, mapping controls, monitoring integrations, and tracking audit requests. These tools can be useful, especially for cloud-native environments with many systems and recurring evidence needs.

    The risk is assuming that automation equals compliance. A tool can show that multifactor authentication is enabled in an identity provider. It cannot decide whether privileged access is appropriate for a user’s role. A tool can collect vulnerability scan results. It cannot make the risk decision for an unpatched system that supports a critical business process. A tool can store policy acknowledgments. It cannot prove that employees understand how to report an incident.

    Automation supports a SOC 2 program. It does not replace governance, judgment, ownership, or control design.


    The Real Goal Is Trust That Survives the Audit Cycle

    A SOC 2 report is valuable because it gives customers an independent view into how a service organization manages controls relevant to trust. For many companies, it can reduce friction in vendor reviews and support growth into larger customers or more regulated markets.

    The deeper value comes when the audit becomes part of a sustained program. A well-run SOC 2 program can improve operational discipline, clarify ownership, strengthen security processes, reduce customer due diligence friction, and help leadership make better risk decisions.

    Passing the audit proves that the organization met the requirements of a defined examination. Maintaining the program proves that trust is being managed every day.

    Organizations that understand the difference are better positioned for repeat audits, customer scrutiny, security incidents, vendor risk reviews, and growth. SOC 2 should not be treated as an annual fire drill. It should operate as a management system for trust, control performance, and accountability across the business.


    How Can Netizen Help?

    Founded in 2013, Netizen is an award-winning technology firm that develops and leverages cutting-edge solutions to create a more secure, integrated, and automated digital environment for government, defense, and commercial clients worldwide. Our innovative solutions transform complex cybersecurity and technology challenges into strategic advantages by delivering mission-critical capabilities that safeguard and optimize clients’ digital infrastructure. One example of this is our popular “CISO-as-a-Service” offering that enables organizations of any size to access executive level cybersecurity expertise at a fraction of the cost of hiring internally. 

    Netizen also operates a state-of-the-art 24x7x365 Security Operations Center (SOC) that delivers comprehensive cybersecurity monitoring solutions for defense, government, and commercial clients. Our service portfolio includes cybersecurity assessments and advisory, hosted SIEM and EDR/XDR solutions, software assurance, penetration testing, cybersecurity engineering, and compliance audit support. We specialize in serving organizations that operate within some of the world’s most highly sensitive and tightly regulated environments where unwavering security, strict compliance, technical excellence, and operational maturity are non-negotiable requirements. Our proven track record in these domains positions us as the premier trusted partner for organizations where technology reliability and security cannot be compromised.

    Netizen holds ISO 27001, ISO 9001, ISO 20000-1, and CMMI Level III SVC registrations demonstrating the maturity of our operations. We are a proud Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) certified by U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) that has been named multiple times to the Inc. 5000 and Vet 100 lists of the most successful and fastest-growing private companies in the nation. Netizen has also been named a national “Best Workplace” by Inc. Magazine, a multiple awardee of the U.S. Department of Labor HIRE Vets Platinum Medallion for veteran hiring and retention, the Lehigh Valley Business of the Year and Veteran-Owned Business of the Year, and the recipient of dozens of other awards and accolades for innovation, community support, working environment, and growth.

    Looking for expert guidance to secure, automate, and streamline your IT infrastructure and operations? Start the conversation today.


  • Netizen: Monday Security Brief (6/15/2026)

    Today’s Topics:

    • Self-Replicating AI Worm Shows Malware Can Reason Its Way Through a Network
    • U.S. Order Pulling Anthropic’s Fable 5 and Mythos 5 Turns AI Cyber Capability Into a National Security Fight
    • How can Netizen help?

    Self-Replicating AI Worm Shows Malware Can Reason Its Way Through a Network

    University of Toronto researchers have demonstrated a proof-of-concept AI worm that changes one of the oldest assumptions in worm defense: that the malware arrives with a fixed exploit path. In a preprint posted to arXiv on June 2, a team from the University of Toronto, the Vector Institute, the University of Cambridge, and ServiceNow described an AI-driven worm that used a locally hosted open-weight large language model to inspect systems, plan attacks, gain elevated access, and copy itself across a network without human direction.

    The research does not describe malware released into the wild. The worm was tested inside an isolated virtual environment, and the authors withheld operational details from the public paper. Still, the results are a warning about where autonomous offensive tooling is heading. This prototype did not rely on OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, or another commercial model provider. It used a local model running on a single GPU, which means provider-side controls such as account suspension, rate limits, refusals, and API revocation would not stop the core mechanism.

    Traditional worms are usually constrained by the exploit logic built into them before deployment. They scan for systems matching a known condition, run a known payload, and spread if that specific path works. Patch the vulnerability, block the traffic pattern, or remove the exposed service, and the worm’s propagation path can collapse.

    The Toronto prototype works differently. It uses the model as an attack engine. The worm identifies what is exposed on a target, reasons about the likely weakness, generates or adapts an attack plan, attempts exploitation, troubleshoots failures, and then stages a replica if access is obtained. The attack path is not fixed at build time. It is produced during execution.

    The researchers tested the worm across 15 independent runs inside a deliberately vulnerable 33-host network named FakeCorp. The network included Ubuntu, Debian, Alpine Linux, Rocky Linux, CentOS Stream, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Server 2019, Windows Server 2022, and IoT-style devices. Each host was seeded with at least one realistic vulnerability or weakness drawn from sources such as the CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog, OWASP Top 10 categories, and MITRE ATT&CK techniques.

    Across seven days of autonomous operation per run, the worm identified an average of 31.3 vulnerabilities, gained elevated access on 23.1 hosts, and launched independent replicas on 20.4 hosts. In percentage terms, it obtained elevated access on 73.8% of the network and replicated to 61.8%. The worm reached up to seven generations of self-replication, with a mean of 5.1 generations.

    The result is significant less for the raw success rate than for the operating model. The test network was intentionally vulnerable and did not include active endpoint defense, antivirus, or firewall enforcement. The authors make that limitation clear. The experiment measured whether an autonomous agent could reason across a mixed network, adapt to different host types, and sustain propagation, not whether it could defeat a mature production security program.

    Even with those limits, the mechanics are difficult to ignore. The worm did not need a universal exploit. It could use one route on a Linux host, another on a Windows system, and another against a web application or exposed service. In one run, the propagation tree crossed multiple generations and operating systems, showing how the model could treat each host as a separate problem rather than a copy of the previous target.

    The paper also undercuts the idea that model training cutoffs create a stable defensive boundary. The worm successfully exploited test hosts configured with three vulnerabilities disclosed after the model’s training period: the Marimo pre-authentication RCE tracked as CVE-2026-39987, the Linux kernel Copy Fail privilege escalation tracked as CVE-2026-31431, and the Dirty Frag Linux kernel privilege-escalation chain tracked through CVE-2026-43284 and CVE-2026-43500. The agent did this by ingesting public advisory information at runtime and converting it into working attack logic inside the lab environment.

    That finding connects directly to real-world exploitation timelines. Sysdig reported that CVE-2026-39987 in Marimo was exploited within 9 hours and 41 minutes of public disclosure, before public proof-of-concept code was available. In a later investigation, Sysdig also documented an intrusion where an attacker used an LLM agent during post-exploitation after compromising an internet-facing Marimo instance. The observed attack moved from initial access to internal database exfiltration in under an hour.

    The broader pattern is not limited to one research paper. Google Threat Intelligence Group reported in May that it had identified what it assessed with high confidence as a zero-day exploit developed with AI assistance, intended for a planned mass exploitation event. Google also reported malware families using AI-linked techniques for dynamic modification, decoy logic, and autonomous command generation. Anthropic reported in November 2025 that it disrupted a cyber-espionage campaign attributed with high confidence to a China-linked state-sponsored group, where Claude Code allegedly handled most of the intrusion workflow across reconnaissance, exploitation, credential harvesting, lateral movement, and exfiltration.

    The Toronto work pushes that trend into worm propagation. Earlier AI worm research, such as Morris II, focused on adversarial self-replicating prompts spreading through GenAI applications and retrieval-augmented generation systems. In that model, the AI application is the propagation medium. In the Toronto prototype, the LLM is not the victim ecosystem. It is the reasoning layer driving attacks against ordinary network infrastructure.

    The compute model is part of the concern. The worm was built around the idea that compromised machines can supply reach, compute, or both. GPU-equipped hosts can become inference nodes for other infected machines that lack the resources to run the model locally. In a poorly segmented network, a compromised AI workstation, research server, rendering box, or machine learning node could become more than another endpoint. It could become a local reasoning hub for autonomous activity.

    That changes the containment problem. Blocking outbound calls to commercial AI services would not address a worm using local open-weight inference. Revoking API keys would not matter if the model is already running on victim-controlled compute. Provider-side safety controls can still reduce abuse of hosted systems, but they are not a complete answer for malware that brings its own model or steals the compute needed to run one.

    The prototype also showed signs that defenders should start thinking beyond static indicators. The authors reported that individual exploitation attempts succeeded 44% of the time, with many failures tied to malformed payload syntax rather than poor strategy. That weakness may shrink as code-generation models improve. They also observed the agent establishing persistence in two trajectories through mechanisms that were not part of the intended experiment, including service registration and scheduled task behavior. The researchers removed those mechanisms when they appeared, but the behavior shows how goal-directed agents can infer operational steps that were not explicitly coded into the harness.

    For defenders, the immediate lesson is not that every network now faces a fully autonomous AI worm. The lab environment was favorable to the attacker, and the implementation has not been publicly released. The lesson is that vulnerability management, segmentation, credential hygiene, and telemetry need to account for malware that can adapt during execution.

    GPU-capable systems deserve closer treatment in enterprise threat models. They are no longer just expensive workstations or infrastructure for AI teams. In an autonomous intrusion scenario, they can provide the compute needed for local reasoning. These systems should be segmented, monitored for unusual inference workloads, and restricted from broad lateral reach.

    Published advisories also need to be treated as near-term weaponization material. The Marimo exploitation window showed that attackers can move from advisory text to working intrusion activity within hours. The Toronto worm’s ability to use newer advisory information inside the test environment reinforces the same point. Patch prioritization can no longer rely only on severity scores and monthly cycles. Internet exposure, exploitability, compensating controls, and credential access paths need to drive response.

    Credential reuse remains one of the fastest propagation paths. An adaptive worm does not need a novel exploit for every host if harvested credentials, exposed keys, or weak service accounts let it move laterally. Any host that is compromised or credibly suspected should trigger credential rotation for secrets reachable from that system, including cloud keys, SSH keys, service tokens, database credentials, and local admin material.

    Detection programs also need behavioral logic for autonomous agents. Useful signals may include unusual process trees launching scanning tools, automated SSH key injection, repeated failed payload generation across multiple hosts, unexpected package installation followed by agent startup, nonstandard local inference activity, unexplained GPU utilization, and clusters of command execution that look like machine-speed troubleshooting rather than human terminal use.

    The central issue is not that AI creates a new category of vulnerability from nothing. It compresses the time between discovery, interpretation, exploitation, and propagation. A worm that can read advisories, test paths, recover from errors, and copy itself does not need attackers to manually script every step. It turns public vulnerability knowledge into operational movement.

    The research is still a controlled demonstration, but the direction is clear. The next meaningful shift in worm behavior may not come from a single devastating exploit. It may come from malware that can decide which exploit, weakness, credential, misconfiguration, or exposed service makes sense next.


    U.S. Order Pulling Anthropic’s Fable 5 and Mythos 5 Turns AI Cyber Capability Into a National Security Fight

    Anthropic took its most advanced AI models offline after the U.S. government ordered the company to suspend access to Claude Fable 5 and Claude Mythos 5 for foreign nationals, a sudden intervention that turned a model-safety dispute into one of the clearest examples yet of AI capability being treated like a controlled national security asset.

    The company said it received the directive at 5:21 p.m. Eastern time on June 12. The order applied to foreign nationals inside and outside the United States, including Anthropic employees. Anthropic said the practical effect was that it had to disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all customers to comply, though access to the company’s other Claude models was not affected.

    The shutdown came only days after Anthropic launched Fable 5 as its first broadly available Mythos-class model. Fable 5 was the public-facing version, built on the same underlying model family as Mythos 5 but wrapped in stricter safety controls. Mythos 5, by comparison, was reserved for a smaller group of vetted cyber defenders and critical infrastructure partners through Anthropic’s trusted-access programs, with certain cybersecurity safeguards lifted for authorized defensive work.

    That distinction is at the center of the dispute. Anthropic’s own launch materials described Mythos-class systems as more capable than its Opus models, with strong performance across software engineering, cyber tasks, scientific work, and long-running agentic workflows. The company said Fable 5 used classifiers and fallback behavior to block high-risk cybersecurity requests, including attack planning, exploit development, and defense evasion. For many cyber-related prompts, Fable 5 was supposed to route the user to a less capable model or refuse the request.

    The government’s concern appears to have focused on whether those protections could be bypassed. Anthropic said officials told the company they were aware of a potential method for jailbreaking Fable 5. According to Anthropic, the method it reviewed involved asking the model to inspect a specific codebase and fix software flaws, producing a small number of known and relatively minor vulnerabilities. The company argued that the demonstrated capability was not unique to Fable 5 and could be reproduced with other publicly available models.

    That argument has not ended the controversy. Reuters reported that U.S. officials saw a risk that the models could be diverted to military intelligence use in adversarial countries, including China and Russia. Semafor separately reported that the decision was linked to fears that a China-linked group may have accessed the models. The Wall Street Journal and other outlets reported that Amazon security researchers raised concerns after using prompts that allegedly led Fable 5 to return information that could aid cyberattacks, and that Amazon CEO Andy Jassy discussed those concerns with the White House.

    David Sacks, a senior White House AI adviser, publicly argued that a trusted partner of both Anthropic and the U.S. government had found a jailbreak that Anthropic refused to fix before the government moved. Anthropic rejected the idea that the reported issue justified recalling a commercial model deployed at scale, saying it had not received technical evidence of a broad jailbreak and that no universal jailbreak had been demonstrated against Fable 5.

    The fight is not just about one model. It is about how governments, AI labs, cloud providers, and defenders draw the line between legitimate security work and offensive capability. Anthropic’s own red-team research had already raised the stakes. Days before the shutdown, the company published findings showing that Mythos Preview could turn recently disclosed vulnerabilities into working exploits far faster than traditional patch cycles assume.

    In Anthropic’s N-day testing, Mythos Preview produced working exploits against Firefox vulnerabilities and full privilege-escalation chains against Windows kernel vulnerabilities. The company said the model generated its first Windows proof of concept in 31 minutes and produced multiple full exploit chains for a few thousand dollars in API credits. Anthropic’s conclusion was blunt: the old assumption that attackers need expert-weeks to weaponize patches is breaking down.

    That context makes the government’s reaction easier to parse. A model that can compress exploit development from weeks into hours changes the risk calculation around public advisories, patch diffing, and delayed remediation. The same capability can help defenders validate fixes, understand exploitability, and prioritize patches. It can also help attackers move faster against organizations still sitting inside the patch gap.

    Fable 5 was supposed to solve that tension through safeguards. Mythos 5 was supposed to limit the highest-risk cyber capabilities to vetted users. The government’s order suggests officials were not satisfied that Anthropic’s controls, monitoring, and access restrictions were enough, at least once the alleged jailbreak and foreign-access concerns entered the picture.

    Cybersecurity leaders have pushed back. A group led by former Facebook security chief Alex Stamos argued that restricting Fable 5 harms defenders more than attackers, since comparable capabilities are available through other frontier models and open models. Their position is that security teams need access to the same level of automation attackers are beginning to use, especially for exploit validation, code review, patch triage, and defensive research.

    That is the operational dilemma. If frontier cyber models are locked down too tightly, authorized defenders lose speed. If they are released too broadly, offensive users may gain a cheaper route to exploit development. If access is limited by nationality rather than risk, companies with global teams can lose the ability to run their own products. Anthropic said the directive was broad enough to include foreign-national employees, which made selective compliance difficult and forced the wider shutdown.

    The case also puts cloud and supply-chain politics in the middle of AI security. Amazon is both a major Anthropic investor and a cloud partner. Its reported role in raising concerns to the White House has drawn attention to how much influence large infrastructure providers may have over the future of model deployment. A security finding from a partner can become a regulatory event if it reaches government officials at the right moment.

    For enterprises, the most immediate lesson is that AI access is becoming a dependency risk. Organizations building workflows around frontier models may have to plan for sudden policy-driven outages, regional restrictions, nationality-based controls, or trusted-access gates. That matters for software development, SOC workflows, vulnerability management, secure code review, incident response, and any business process tied to model-specific performance.

    The case also signals that AI governance is moving from voluntary safety frameworks into hard national security controls. Frontier models are being evaluated less like ordinary SaaS products and more like dual-use infrastructure. Cyber capability, biological capability, agentic autonomy, data retention, user vetting, export controls, and monitoring are becoming part of the same policy conversation.

    For defenders, the issue should not be reduced to whether Fable 5 should or should not have been suspended. The more durable issue is that model-assisted exploit development is now credible enough to trigger emergency government action. That alone should change how security teams think about patch windows, exposure management, and cyber tooling.

    Patch Tuesday can no longer be treated as a slow-moving administrative cycle if models can turn public patches into working attack paths within hours. Internet-facing systems need faster triage. Critical vulnerabilities need temporary controls when patching cannot happen immediately. Security teams need better exploitability analysis, stronger asset visibility, and faster validation that mitigations actually work.

    At the same time, defenders will need clear, auditable ways to use advanced AI safely. Trusted-access programs, identity-gated cyber models, enterprise monitoring, approved-use scoping, and stronger account security are likely to become standard features for high-capability defensive AI. The question is whether those controls can be precise enough to support real defense without handing the same capability to malicious users.


    How Can Netizen Help?

    Founded in 2013, Netizen is an award-winning technology firm that develops and leverages cutting-edge solutions to create a more secure, integrated, and automated digital environment for government, defense, and commercial clients worldwide. Our innovative solutions transform complex cybersecurity and technology challenges into strategic advantages by delivering mission-critical capabilities that safeguard and optimize clients’ digital infrastructure. One example of this is our popular “CISO-as-a-Service” offering that enables organizations of any size to access executive level cybersecurity expertise at a fraction of the cost of hiring internally. 

    Netizen also operates a state-of-the-art 24x7x365 Security Operations Center (SOC) that delivers comprehensive cybersecurity monitoring solutions for defense, government, and commercial clients. Our service portfolio includes cybersecurity assessments and advisory, hosted SIEM and EDR/XDR solutions, software assurance, penetration testing, cybersecurity engineering, and compliance audit support. We specialize in serving organizations that operate within some of the world’s most highly sensitive and tightly regulated environments where unwavering security, strict compliance, technical excellence, and operational maturity are non-negotiable requirements. Our proven track record in these domains positions us as the premier trusted partner for organizations where technology reliability and security cannot be compromised.

    Netizen holds ISO 27001, ISO 9001, ISO 20000-1, and CMMI Level III SVC registrations demonstrating the maturity of our operations. We are a proud Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) certified by U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) that has been named multiple times to the Inc. 5000 and Vet 100 lists of the most successful and fastest-growing private companies in the nation. Netizen has also been named a national “Best Workplace” by Inc. Magazine, a multiple awardee of the U.S. Department of Labor HIRE Vets Platinum Medallion for veteran hiring and retention, the Lehigh Valley Business of the Year and Veteran-Owned Business of the Year, and the recipient of dozens of other awards and accolades for innovation, community support, working environment, and growth.

    Looking for expert guidance to secure, automate, and streamline your IT infrastructure and operations? Start the conversation today.


  • How Living-Off-the-Land Attacks Bypass Traditional Security Controls

    Living-off-the-land attacks have become one of the clearest examples of a security problem that cannot be solved by malware detection alone. Instead of bringing obvious malicious tooling into an environment, attackers use what is already present: signed Windows binaries, administrative consoles, scripting engines, remote management services, cloud command-line tools, backup utilities, identity platforms, and trusted software already approved by IT.

    The strategy is effective for a simple reason. Many security controls were built to answer a narrow question: “Is this file, hash, domain, attachment, or executable known to be bad?” Living-off-the-land activity changes the question. The executable may be signed by Microsoft. The command may be launched by an account that has valid credentials. The network traffic may use HTTPS, SMB, WinRM, RDP, or a sanctioned cloud API. The action may look like administration until it is placed in the correct behavioral context.

    That is why these attacks bypass traditional controls so often. The problem is not that antivirus, EDR, firewalls, SIEMs, or allowlists have no value. The problem is that many of them fail when telemetry is incomplete, baselines are missing, alert logic is too generic, and legitimate administration has never been separated from attacker tradecraft.


    What Living Off the Land Means Mechanically

    A living-off-the-land attack is the abuse of native or trusted tools to perform malicious actions. In Windows environments, this often includes PowerShell, cmd.exe, Windows Management Instrumentation, Windows Remote Management, rundll32.exe, regsvr32.exe, mshta.exe, certutil.exe, bitsadmin.exe, schtasks.exe, net.exe, netsh.exe, vssadmin.exe, and ntdsutil.exe. In Linux environments, attackers may use bash, curl, wget, Python, systemctl, cron, SSH, tar, or built-in package managers. In macOS environments, native scripting and persistence mechanisms such as osascript, launchctl, shell scripts, and LaunchAgents can serve a similar role. In cloud environments, the same pattern appears through Azure CLI, AWS CLI, Google Cloud CLI, Microsoft Graph PowerShell modules, cloud shells, service principals, API tokens, and management consoles.

    The attacker’s goal is not merely stealth. LOTL tradecraft also reduces operational cost. An attacker using built-in tooling does not need to deploy a large malware set, maintain custom implants for every target, or risk immediate detection by hash-based scanning. Once valid credentials are obtained, native tools can support reconnaissance, execution, lateral movement, credential access, persistence, exfiltration staging, and defense evasion.

    A typical intrusion may start with phishing, exposed remote access, a vulnerable edge device, stolen credentials, or a compromised SaaS account. After access is obtained, the attacker can enumerate the domain with net.exe or PowerShell, execute commands remotely through WMI or WinRM, copy files through SMB, stage payloads with certutil or BITS, dump Active Directory data using vssadmin and ntdsutil, create scheduled tasks for persistence, and modify firewall or proxy settings with netsh. Each individual action may resemble legitimate administrative work. The malicious nature comes from the sequence, account context, timing, destination, parent process, host role, and deviation from baseline.


    Why Traditional Antivirus Misses LOTL Activity

    Traditional antivirus is strongest against known malicious files, suspicious static traits, and recognized malware families. LOTL activity often leaves no traditional malware artifact. The attacker may execute commands directly in memory, use trusted interpreters, or run one-line scripts that never persist as a conventional executable on disk.

    PowerShell is a common example. It is a legitimate Windows automation framework used by administrators, help desk teams, endpoint management tools, and software deployment systems. An attacker can use it for discovery, credential access, payload retrieval, code execution, and remote administration. A static scanner looking only for a malicious binary may see nothing abnormal. The binary being executed is powershell.exe, signed and expected on Windows systems.

    The same issue applies to rundll32.exe and regsvr32.exe. Both can be abused to proxy execution through trusted signed binaries. If a control treats signed Microsoft binaries as inherently safe, an attacker can use that trust boundary against the environment. The executable itself is legitimate; the abuse sits in the arguments, loaded content, parent-child relationship, loaded DLL path, network connection, or scriptlet behavior.

    This is why hash-centric detection breaks down. The hash of powershell.exe or rundll32.exe is not the signal. The signal is that PowerShell was launched by Word, Excel, a browser, a PDF reader, or a suspicious parent process; that it used encoded or hidden execution parameters; that it made outbound network connections; that it spawned another process; or that it ran under a user context that does not normally perform administration.


    Why Allowlisting Can Still Fail

    Application allowlisting is valuable, but weak policy design can create a false sense of control. Many organizations allow Windows system binaries by default, trust signed Microsoft executables broadly, or grant broad script execution rights to avoid disrupting IT operations. Attackers know this and select binaries likely to pass policy checks.

    This is the central weakness behind signed binary proxy execution. The security control permits the signed tool, then the attacker uses that tool to execute or load untrusted content. Mshta.exe can execute HTML application content. Regsvr32.exe can proxy execution through COM registration behavior. Rundll32.exe can load DLLs from locations that should not host executable content. InstallUtil.exe, MSBuild.exe, and similar developer or framework utilities may run code paths that were never expected in standard user workflows.

    A mature allowlisting model must account for more than file identity. It needs path, signer, command-line parameters, parent process, user role, device group, child process creation, and network behavior. Allowing rundll32.exe from System32 is not the same as allowing rundll32.exe to load a DLL from a user profile, temporary directory, browser cache, SMB share, or newly created directory.


    Why EDR Alerts Become Noisy

    Modern EDR tools are far better suited to LOTL detection than legacy antivirus, but EDR is still limited by tuning, data quality, and analyst workflow. A generic alert for PowerShell usage is not useful in an enterprise where administrators, endpoint management agents, installers, and security tools use PowerShell every day. A generic alert for WMI activity can create the same problem.

    Attackers exploit this operational noise. They run commands that resemble IT administration, use real accounts, operate during business hours, and avoid obviously malicious binaries. In many environments, suspicious LOTL activity is visible in telemetry, yet it is buried among high-volume administrative events.

    This is where many defenses fail. The issue is not always missing data. It is often missing context. Security teams need to know which users normally run remote PowerShell, which devices initiate WMI connections, which servers should use ntdsutil.exe, which hosts are allowed to use certutil.exe for network retrieval, and which administrative tools should never launch from an Office child process.

    A tuned detection should ask context-heavy questions. Did a non-administrative user launch a scripting interpreter? Did PowerShell spawn from a browser, email client, Office process, archive utility, or PDF reader? Did a workstation initiate WMI execution against several servers? Did certutil.exe contact an external domain and write to a user-writable path? Did rundll32.exe load a DLL from a nonstandard directory? Did netsh create a port proxy rule on a device that has no operational reason to do so?


    Why Network Security Controls Miss It

    Network defenses often look for known malicious destinations, exploit signatures, suspicious protocols, or abnormal traffic volume. LOTL activity can avoid each of these. Attackers may use legitimate remote access channels, built-in management protocols, sanctioned cloud services, or encrypted web traffic. They may transfer data in small volumes, blend activity with real administrative traffic, or route activity through already compromised internal systems.

    For example, WMI, WinRM, SMB, RDP, SSH, and HTTPS may all be legitimate inside an enterprise. Blocking them outright is rarely practical. Attackers can use these same protocols for remote execution, file movement, tunneling, discovery, or credentialed access. A firewall that permits WinRM from a management subnet may have no way to judge whether the command sent across that connection is normal administration or malicious execution. A proxy may see a connection to a permitted cloud service, yet not the intent behind the session.

    This is also where cloud LOTL becomes difficult. If an attacker obtains a valid cloud token, many actions happen in the control plane rather than on a monitored endpoint. The attacker may enumerate storage, create access keys, modify firewall rules, snapshot disks, change identity policies, or export data through cloud-native APIs. A traditional endpoint control may see little or nothing. Detection depends on audit logging, identity telemetry, API activity, conditional access signals, and correlation across cloud and endpoint data.


    Credential Abuse Makes LOTL Harder to Separate From Administration

    LOTL attacks often become most dangerous after credential theft or token compromise. Once the attacker has valid credentials, authentication may appear successful, compliant, and routine. The account may pass MFA if the attacker stole a session token, used an approved device, abused legacy authentication, or socially engineered the user.

    Valid credentials let attackers reduce the need for exploit code. They can access management interfaces, move laterally, run native commands, and query internal resources without dropping malware. This changes the detection problem from “block the exploit” to “identify account behavior that does not match the user, host, privilege level, or business process.”

    Identity telemetry becomes central. Defenders should correlate logon type, source device, geographic context, impossible travel indicators, privilege use, new device enrollment, new service principal activity, administrative group changes, token use, and unusual command execution. A domain admin logging into a domain controller during a maintenance window may be normal. A help desk account using remote PowerShell against finance servers from an unmanaged workstation at 2:00 a.m. is a different event.


    Common LOTL Attack Patterns

    One common pattern is script-based execution. An attacker uses PowerShell, cmd.exe, wscript.exe, cscript.exe, mshta.exe, Python, or bash to execute commands, retrieve payloads, perform discovery, or load code into memory. Detection should focus on parent process, execution policy changes, encoded or compressed command content, web requests, unusual child processes, and use by accounts that do not normally run scripts.

    A second pattern is remote administration abuse. WMI, WinRM, PsExec-like behavior, SMB admin shares, RDP, SSH, and remote service creation can all support lateral movement. Detection should focus on source-to-destination relationships, remote execution from non-management systems, rare administrator account use, sudden fan-out to many endpoints, new services, and command execution following authentication.

    A third pattern is signed binary proxy execution. Rundll32.exe, regsvr32.exe, mshta.exe, cmstp.exe, installutil.exe, and msbuild.exe can execute or load content through trusted binaries. Detection should focus on unusual file paths, suspicious command-line arguments, network retrieval, user-writable directories, unexpected parent processes, DLL loads from temporary paths, and child process chains.

    A fourth pattern is trusted transfer tooling. Certutil.exe, bitsadmin.exe, curl, wget, ftp, scp, cloud storage clients, and native package managers can retrieve or move tools. The command may look like a normal download. The relevant question is whether that tool should contact that destination, write to that directory, run under that account, and launch follow-on execution.

    A fifth pattern is credential and directory abuse. Vssadmin.exe, ntdsutil.exe, esentutl.exe, reg.exe, net.exe, dsquery, nltest, whoami, and PowerShell directory modules can support credential access and domain discovery. Use of vssadmin or ntdsutil on a domain controller should be tightly controlled and reviewed. A command sequence that creates a volume shadow copy, accesses NTDS.dit, stages files, and transfers them off-host is highly suspicious outside a known backup workflow.

    A sixth pattern is security control tampering. Attackers may disable services, modify logging, alter firewall settings, create proxy rules, clear event logs, change exclusions, or weaken endpoint protection through native tools. Commands that stop security services, modify Defender exclusions, clear logs, change audit settings, or create netsh port proxy entries should be treated as high-value telemetry.


    Detection Requires Behavior, Not Just Indicators

    The main weakness of IOC-based detection is that LOTL activity produces fewer stable indicators. Domains, IP addresses, file names, and command syntax can change quickly. The underlying behavior changes less. An attacker still needs to execute, discover, authenticate, move, stage, persist, collect, and exfiltrate.

    Behavioral detection does not mean vague anomaly alerts. It means mapping expected activity and identifying high-risk deviations. A strong LOTL detection program starts with telemetry coverage: process creation with full command line, parent and child processes, file writes, module loads, network connections, DNS queries, script block logging, WMI activity, scheduled task creation, service creation, authentication events, privilege use, cloud audit logs, and identity provider logs.

    From there, detections should be written around chains of activity. A single PowerShell command may be benign. PowerShell spawned by an Office process, making an external web request, writing into a temporary directory, and spawning rundll32.exe is much more meaningful. A single WMI event may be normal. WMI execution from a workstation into several servers, followed by service creation and outbound traffic, is not.

    Security teams should prioritize detections that combine context. Useful dimensions include user role, host role, process ancestry, command-line content, execution path, signer, destination, time of day, peer group behavior, privilege level, and recent authentication pattern. This approach reduces false positives and makes alerts more actionable.


    Logging Gaps Are a Major Reason LOTL Works

    Many organizations cannot detect LOTL tradecraft due to missing telemetry. Default logging often does not capture enough detail to reconstruct attacker behavior. Without full command-line logging, defenders may know that powershell.exe ran but not what it did. Without script block logging, the executed content may remain opaque. Without Sysmon or comparable endpoint telemetry, parent-child relationships, network connections, file writes, and module loads may be incomplete. Without centralized log storage, attackers can delete or modify local evidence.

    For Windows environments, high-value telemetry often includes Security Event ID 4688 with command-line process creation, PowerShell Script Block Logging Event ID 4104, PowerShell Module Logging Event ID 4103, WMI-Activity Operational events such as 5857 through 5861, Sysmon process creation, network connection, DNS, image load, file creation, WMI event subscription, and scheduled task events. Domain controllers need close monitoring for vssadmin.exe, ntdsutil.exe, esentutl.exe, suspicious volume shadow copy access, unusual replication activity, privileged logons, and sensitive directory queries.

    For Linux and macOS environments, defenders need shell history where available, auditd or equivalent event collection, process execution telemetry, cron and systemd changes, SSH authentication logs, sudo usage, new authorized keys, package manager activity, outbound network connections, and file integrity monitoring for persistence locations.

    For cloud environments, defenders need audit logs for identity, compute, storage, network, key management, serverless functions, SaaS administration, service principal changes, API token creation, conditional access changes, and data access. Cloud-native LOTL can bypass endpoint visibility completely, so cloud control-plane logs must be treated as primary security telemetry.


    Hardening Against LOTL

    Reducing LOTL risk starts with limiting who can use high-risk administrative tools, where they can run, and what they can reach. Admin activity should occur from hardened administrative workstations, not daily-use endpoints. Privileged accounts should be separated from standard user accounts. Remote administration should be restricted by network segment, device trust, and role. PowerShell remoting, WinRM, WMI, RDP, SSH, and administrative shares should be exposed only where operationally required.

    Application control should be used with care. Blocking every native tool is unrealistic, but high-risk LOLBins can be constrained by user group, device group, path, and use case. Script execution should be controlled through signed scripts, constrained language mode where suitable, and policy-backed execution controls. User-writable directories should not be trusted execution locations.

    Identity controls matter just as much as endpoint controls. Phishing-resistant MFA, conditional access, privileged access management, just-in-time administration, local administrator password management, service account governance, and regular privilege review all reduce the chance that valid credentials become a quiet path for LOTL activity.

    Network segmentation also limits the blast radius. Workstations should not have broad management access to servers. Domain controllers should accept administration only from approved systems. Backup infrastructure, identity systems, hypervisors, and security tooling should sit in protected segments with strict authentication, logging, and access paths.


    SOC Priorities for LOTL Detection

    A SOC trying to improve LOTL coverage should start with a small set of high-value use cases rather than a flood of generic alerts. The first priority is process execution visibility on endpoints and servers, including command line and parent-child process relationships. The second priority is privileged account monitoring, especially unusual logons, remote execution, administrative group changes, and new service or scheduled task creation. The third priority is high-risk LOLBin monitoring for binaries that are rarely used in normal workflows.

    Detection engineering should focus on attacker objectives. For execution, monitor suspicious script interpreters and signed proxy binaries. For lateral movement, monitor WMI, WinRM, SMB admin shares, RDP, SSH, and remote service creation. For credential access, monitor LSASS access, shadow copy creation, NTDS.dit access, registry hive export, and suspicious use of directory tools. For defense evasion, monitor logging changes, service stops, security tool exclusions, firewall changes, and event log clearing. For exfiltration, monitor unusual compression, staging directories, cloud storage uploads, outbound transfers, and data access from abnormal accounts.

    The best detections will not simply say, “PowerShell ran.” They will say, “PowerShell ran from an abnormal parent process, under a non-administrative user, with encoded content, followed by external network access and a child process.” That is the difference between a noisy rule and a useful detection.


    Why LOTL Requires a Different Security Model

    Living-off-the-land attacks succeed when security programs treat trusted tools as trusted behavior. That assumption no longer holds. A signed binary can execute malicious content. A valid account can act maliciously. A sanctioned protocol can carry attacker commands. A normal cloud API can exfiltrate data. A legitimate remote management tool can become persistence.

    The defensive model needs to move from object reputation to operational context. Security teams need to know what normal administration looks like, where privileged actions should originate, which tools are expected on which hosts, what scripts are approved, and which cloud actions match business workflows. Controls should then detect deviations from that model.

    LOTL is not a niche tradecraft problem. It is a visibility, identity, hardening, and detection engineering problem. Organizations that rely only on static malware detection, default logging, broad allowlists, and untuned EDR rules will continue to miss attacker activity that is plainly visible but poorly interpreted. The stronger approach is to combine centralized logging, behavior-based analytics, least privilege, segmented administration, cloud audit coverage, and detection logic built around real attacker workflows.

    The core lesson is direct: if defenders cannot distinguish legitimate administration from malicious administration, attackers will continue to hide inside the tools the business already trusts.


    How Can Netizen Help?

    Founded in 2013, Netizen is an award-winning technology firm that develops and leverages cutting-edge solutions to create a more secure, integrated, and automated digital environment for government, defense, and commercial clients worldwide. Our innovative solutions transform complex cybersecurity and technology challenges into strategic advantages by delivering mission-critical capabilities that safeguard and optimize clients’ digital infrastructure. One example of this is our popular “CISO-as-a-Service” offering that enables organizations of any size to access executive level cybersecurity expertise at a fraction of the cost of hiring internally. 

    Netizen also operates a state-of-the-art 24x7x365 Security Operations Center (SOC) that delivers comprehensive cybersecurity monitoring solutions for defense, government, and commercial clients. Our service portfolio includes cybersecurity assessments and advisory, hosted SIEM and EDR/XDR solutions, software assurance, penetration testing, cybersecurity engineering, and compliance audit support. We specialize in serving organizations that operate within some of the world’s most highly sensitive and tightly regulated environments where unwavering security, strict compliance, technical excellence, and operational maturity are non-negotiable requirements. Our proven track record in these domains positions us as the premier trusted partner for organizations where technology reliability and security cannot be compromised.

    Netizen holds ISO 27001, ISO 9001, ISO 20000-1, and CMMI Level III SVC registrations demonstrating the maturity of our operations. We are a proud Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) certified by U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) that has been named multiple times to the Inc. 5000 and Vet 100 lists of the most successful and fastest-growing private companies in the nation. Netizen has also been named a national “Best Workplace” by Inc. Magazine, a multiple awardee of the U.S. Department of Labor HIRE Vets Platinum Medallion for veteran hiring and retention, the Lehigh Valley Business of the Year and Veteran-Owned Business of the Year, and the recipient of dozens of other awards and accolades for innovation, community support, working environment, and growth.

    Looking for expert guidance to secure, automate, and streamline your IT infrastructure and operations? Start the conversation today.


  • June 2026 Patch Tuesday: Microsoft Addresses 200 Flaws, Including BitLocker and HTTP/2 Zero-Days

    Microsoft’s June 2026 Patch Tuesday includes security updates for 200 vulnerabilities, making it one of the largest patch releases in recent years. The update addresses three publicly disclosed zero-days and 33 critical vulnerabilities, the majority of which are remote code execution flaws. While none of the zero-days are known to have been exploited in the wild, several involve core Windows security mechanisms and could present significant risk if left unpatched.


    Breakdown of Vulnerabilities

    • 65 Elevation of Privilege vulnerabilities
    • 55 Remote Code Execution vulnerabilities
    • 30 Information Disclosure vulnerabilities
    • 27 Spoofing vulnerabilities
    • 19 Security Feature Bypass vulnerabilities
    • 7 Denial of Service vulnerabilities

    These totals do not include vulnerabilities addressed earlier in Microsoft services such as Mariner, Azure HorizonDB, Microsoft Copilot, Copilot Chat, Microsoft 365 Copilot, Exchange Online, and Microsoft Graph. They also exclude 360 Microsoft Edge and Chromium vulnerabilities fixed separately by Google.


    Zero-Day Vulnerabilities

    This month’s release addresses three publicly disclosed zero-days.

    CVE-2026-45586 | Windows Collaborative Translation Framework (CTFMON) Elevation of Privilege Vulnerability

    This vulnerability allows an authorized attacker to gain SYSTEM privileges through improper link resolution before file access, commonly known as a link-following flaw. Successful exploitation requires local access and could enable complete system compromise. Microsoft attributes the discovery to an anonymous researcher but has not disclosed additional details regarding its public disclosure.

    CVE-2026-49160 | HTTP.sys Denial of Service Vulnerability

    This vulnerability, referred to as “HTTP/2 Bomb,” allows attackers to trigger denial of service conditions by abusing HTTP/2 header compression and resource allocation mechanisms. Researchers demonstrated that specially crafted requests can force disproportionate memory consumption, potentially leading to service degradation or outages. To mitigate this issue, Microsoft introduced a new MaxHeadersCount registry setting that allows administrators to limit the number of headers accepted in HTTP/2 and HTTP/3 requests. The vulnerability was discovered by Quang Luong and Codex of Calif.io.

    CVE-2026-50507 | Windows BitLocker Security Feature Bypass Vulnerability

    This vulnerability allows attackers with physical access to bypass BitLocker protections and access encrypted drives. The flaw, known publicly as “YellowKey,” abuses the Windows Recovery Environment by leveraging specially crafted files placed on removable media or EFI partitions. Researchers demonstrated that holding a specific key sequence during recovery could expose a command shell with unrestricted access to protected drives. The issue primarily impacts systems configured with TPM-only BitLocker authentication. Microsoft previously recommended mitigating the risk by enabling TPM+PIN authentication rather than relying solely on TPM protection.


    Other Notable Vulnerabilities

    Beyond the zero-days, Microsoft patched a significant number of critical remote code execution vulnerabilities across Windows components, enterprise services, and productivity applications. The unusually high number of RCE vulnerabilities this month makes patch prioritization especially important for organizations managing internet-facing systems and collaborative platforms.


    Adobe and Other Vendor Updates

    Several major vendors released security updates alongside Microsoft’s June patches:

    • Acer warned customers about two maximum-severity vulnerabilities affecting Wave 7 routers that remain unpatched.
    • Check Point released updates for Remote Access VPN and Mobile Access vulnerabilities exploited by Qilin ransomware operators.
    • Cisco issued patches for multiple products, including a Unified Communications Manager vulnerability with public proof-of-concept exploit code and an actively exploited SD-WAN zero-day.
    • Fortinet released updates addressing vulnerabilities in FortiOS, FortiSandbox, and FortiProxy.
    • Google’s June Android bulletin fixed 124 vulnerabilities and one actively exploited flaw. Google also patched an actively exploited Chrome zero-day.
    • Ivanti released updates for Endpoint Manager Mobile and Ivanti Sentry vulnerabilities, with no active exploitation reported.
    • Ubiquiti fixed three maximum-severity vulnerabilities that could lead to remote code execution.
    • SAP addressed four critical vulnerabilities across multiple products.
    • Veeam released fixes for a critical Backup & Replication vulnerability that could enable remote code execution on domain-joined backup servers.

    Recommendations for Users and Administrators

    Organizations should prioritize deployment of June’s updates due to the unusually high number of remote code execution and privilege escalation vulnerabilities. Systems utilizing SharePoint, Windows recovery environments, HTTP/2 services, and BitLocker should receive particular attention.

    Administrators should review BitLocker configurations and consider TPM+PIN deployments where feasible, evaluate HTTP.sys exposure and implement the new header-limiting controls, and validate that endpoint and server systems receive the latest cumulative updates. Security teams should also review third-party advisories from Cisco, Veeam, Fortinet, and Check Point, especially where active exploitation has already been observed.

    A patch volume of 200 vulnerabilities and 33 critical flaws makes June 2026 one of the most significant Patch Tuesday releases of the year, warranting accelerated testing and deployment across enterprise environments.

    Full technical details and patch links are available in Microsoft’s Security Update Guide.


    How Can Netizen Help?

    Founded in 2013, Netizen is an award-winning technology firm that develops and leverages cutting-edge solutions to create a more secure, integrated, and automated digital environment for government, defense, and commercial clients worldwide. Our innovative solutions transform complex cybersecurity and technology challenges into strategic advantages by delivering mission-critical capabilities that safeguard and optimize clients’ digital infrastructure. One example of this is our popular “CISO-as-a-Service” offering that enables organizations of any size to access executive level cybersecurity expertise at a fraction of the cost of hiring internally. 

    Netizen also operates a state-of-the-art 24x7x365 Security Operations Center (SOC) that delivers comprehensive cybersecurity monitoring solutions for defense, government, and commercial clients. Our service portfolio includes cybersecurity assessments and advisory, hosted SIEM and EDR/XDR solutions, software assurance, penetration testing, cybersecurity engineering, and compliance audit support. We specialize in serving organizations that operate within some of the world’s most highly sensitive and tightly regulated environments where unwavering security, strict compliance, technical excellence, and operational maturity are non-negotiable requirements. Our proven track record in these domains positions us as the premier trusted partner for organizations where technology reliability and security cannot be compromised.

    Netizen holds ISO 27001, ISO 9001, ISO 20000-1, and CMMI Level III SVC registrations demonstrating the maturity of our operations. We are a proud Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) certified by U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) that has been named multiple times to the Inc. 5000 and Vet 100 lists of the most successful and fastest-growing private companies in the nation. Netizen has also been named a national “Best Workplace” by Inc. Magazine, a multiple awardee of the U.S. Department of Labor HIRE Vets Platinum Medallion for veteran hiring and retention, the Lehigh Valley Business of the Year and Veteran-Owned Business of the Year, and the recipient of dozens of other awards and accolades for innovation, community support, working environment, and growth.

    Looking for expert guidance to secure, automate, and streamline your IT infrastructure and operations? Start the conversation today.


  • Netizen: Monday Security Brief (6/8/2026)

    Today’s Topics:

    • LLM Agent Used in Post-Exploitation Attack After Marimo Vulnerability Exploit
    • Internet-Exposed Tank Gauges Become a Cyber Risk for U.S. Fuel and Industrial Sites
    • How can Netizen help?

    LLM Agent Used in Post-Exploitation Attack After Marimo Vulnerability Exploit

    A threat actor was observed using a large language model agent to conduct post-exploitation activity after compromising a publicly exposed Marimo notebook through CVE-2026-39987, a critical pre-authenticated remote code execution vulnerability affecting Marimo versions up to and including 0.20.4.

    The activity, reported by Sysdig, shows how attackers are beginning to use AI agents after initial access to make live decisions inside compromised environments. In this case, the attacker exploited an internet-facing Marimo instance, searched the host for credentials, extracted two cloud access keys, then used those credentials to retrieve an SSH private key from AWS Secrets Manager. That key was later used to access a downstream SSH bastion server.

    CVE-2026-39987 allows unauthenticated attackers to execute arbitrary system commands on vulnerable Marimo deployments. The flaw was fixed in Marimo 0.23.0, but exposed instances have since been targeted in active exploitation. Earlier activity tied to the bug involved reconnaissance and attempts to harvest sensitive data from honeypot environments. The Sysdig incident adds a new dimension: the attacker appeared to rely on an LLM agent to adapt post-compromise actions to the environment in real time.

    The incident took place on May 10, 2026. After gaining access to the vulnerable Marimo system, the attacker collected credentials from the environment and used an AWS access key to call AWS Secrets Manager. From there, the attacker retrieved an SSH private key, authenticated to a bastion host, and launched eight short parallel SSH sessions against the downstream server.

    Those sessions were used to extract the schema and full contents of an internal PostgreSQL database in under two minutes. The full attack chain lasted a little over an hour from initial access to database theft.

    Sysdig identified several signs suggesting that an LLM agent was involved. The attacker appeared to improvise the database theft without prior knowledge of the schema. The database host did not contain an obvious application identifier, and there was no pre-staged schema dump available to the attacker. Even so, the activity moved from host access to a credential table within minutes.

    A Chinese-language planning comment also appeared directly in the command stream during a credential search. The phrase, “看还能做什么,” translates to “See what else we can do.” Sysdig interpreted the leaked comment as another indicator that an agent-driven workflow was generating or coordinating commands during the intrusion.

    The command structure also appeared optimized for machine consumption. Commands were separated by “—” delimiters, outputs were bounded, the “less” command was disabled, and standard error output was discarded to reduce noise. Those traits are consistent with an operator or agent trying to keep command output predictable for automated parsing.

    Sysdig also pointed to value handoffs between commands. In one example, the attacker read the contents of the “~/.pgpass” file and appeared to feed the extracted database password into the next step. In another, the attacker listed files matching an SSH key pattern before reading the matching private key file. This suggests that the workflow was using prior command output to decide the next action, rather than following a static script.

    The broader security concern is that AI-assisted post-exploitation can lower the effort required to operate inside unfamiliar environments. A traditional script may fail when a file is missing, a schema is unexpected, or an authentication step breaks. An agent-driven workflow can interpret the failure, adjust commands, and continue probing.

    That adaptiveness changes the defender’s problem. Security teams are no longer only looking for prebuilt playbooks, known tools, or predictable command sequences. They also need to watch for behavior that looks exploratory but remains highly structured, fast, and machine-readable.

    For organizations running Marimo, the immediate priority is to update to a fixed release, audit for public exposure, and investigate any internet-facing notebook environments that may have been accessible before patching. Credentials stored on affected hosts should be treated as exposed. AWS access keys, API keys, SSH keys, database passwords, and other secrets should be rotated where compromise is possible.

    Security teams should also review cloud audit logs for unusual Secrets Manager access, unexpected AWS API calls, abnormal egress patterns, SSH authentication events using recently accessed keys, and suspicious database dump activity. Marimo instances should not be left publicly reachable without strong authentication, network controls, and monitoring. Notebook environments often sit close to sensitive data, developer credentials, cloud access, and internal infrastructure, making them high-value targets after exploitation.


    Internet-Exposed Tank Gauges Become a Cyber Risk for U.S. Fuel and Industrial Sites

    Cyberattackers are targeting internet-exposed automatic tank gauge systems in the United States, prompting federal agencies to warn fuel operators, industrial facilities, and other critical infrastructure organizations to remove the devices from public access and harden them against compromise.

    The warning, issued by CISA, the FBI, the NSA, the Department of Energy, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Transportation Security Administration, the Department of Transportation, and the Department of Agriculture, focuses on automatic tank gauge systems, commonly known as ATGs. These devices are used to monitor fuel levels, liquid volume, temperature, leaks, alarms, and other storage tank conditions across gas stations, chemical facilities, farms, airports, hospitals, military sites, transportation operations, and industrial environments.

    ATGs are often treated as background operational technology. They sit close to storage tanks, collect readings from probes, display measurements for operators, and in many deployments feed data into broader supervisory control and data acquisition environments. Their role can appear narrow from an IT perspective, but their operational value is high. A compromised gauge can interfere with how a site sees its inventory, how it detects leaks, how it responds to abnormal tank conditions, and how operators decide whether it is safe to continue normal activity.

    Federal agencies said they are aware of malicious cyber activity targeting U.S.-based ATG systems. The activity has not been formally attributed to a named threat group, but officials and security researchers have been tracking attacks against internet-facing tank gauges at gas stations and other facilities. Some reporting has pointed to possible Iran-linked activity, though federal authorities have not publicly assigned blame in the joint guidance.

    The core issue is exposure. Many ATG systems were never meant to sit directly on the public internet, yet scans continue to find reachable devices. In its reporting, Dark Reading cited Shadowserver data showing 909 discoverable ATG systems in the United States after honeypots were filtered out. Canada followed with 30 exposed devices, Australia with 22, and the United Kingdom and Brazil with four each. Those numbers suggest the U.S. remains the main center of exposed ATG risk, even after years of warnings.

    This is not a new class of industrial security problem. More than a decade ago, researchers and scanning projects were already identifying thousands of unsecured tank gauges online. A 2015 report cited roughly 5,800 exposed automated tank gauges tied mostly to gas stations, truck stops, and convenience stores in the United States. Many of those systems lacked password protection. Researchers also built honeypot systems to observe attacker behavior and saw scanning, probing, defacement, tank-name manipulation, and denial-of-service activity.

    The difference now is that exposed ATGs are being discussed in the context of active malicious activity against U.S. infrastructure, not just theoretical risk or security research. The federal notice says attackers have compromised internet-exposed devices and then modified them through command execution. Cybersecurity Dive reported that the attacks can involve disabling alerts or otherwise interfering with monitoring, which can prevent operators from trusting what the system is reporting.

    The risk is not limited to someone changing a display label or causing nuisance downtime. ATGs can support inventory control, leak detection, tank capacity settings, overflow thresholds, alarms, relays, and other functions tied to the safe handling of fuel and industrial liquids. If an attacker changes those values, disables alarms, or hides abnormal readings, the operator may be working from false information. That can create safety risk, environmental risk, operational disruption, and financial loss.

    Security researchers have also shown that many ATG products carry serious legacy risk. Bitsight’s 2024 research found multiple zero-day vulnerabilities across six ATG systems from five vendors. The affected product set included Maglink LX, Maglink LX4, OPW SiteSentinel, Proteus OEL8000, Alisonic Sibylla, and Franklin TS-550. The flaws included authentication bypass, hardcoded administrator credentials, OS command execution, SQL injection, cross-site scripting, privilege escalation, and arbitrary file read. Several were rated critical, and some could give an attacker full administrator access to the device application or even operating system-level access.

    Those findings fit a broader pattern in operational technology. ATG systems are designed to last for years in field conditions, often in environments where downtime is difficult, patching is slow, and remote access is valued for maintenance. Security controls are frequently weaker than what would be expected on enterprise IT systems. Some devices still rely on old software stacks, default credentials, limited logging, or exposed management services. They are also too constrained to support traditional endpoint security tooling.

    For attackers, that creates a direct path from internet exposure to operational impact. A device with default credentials, a hardcoded password, an authentication bypass, or command execution flaw may be reachable without first compromising the corporate network. Once accessed, the ATG can be altered, disrupted, or used as a foothold for deeper reconnaissance, depending on the network design around it.

    The most direct defensive step is to remove ATG systems from public internet access. These systems should be placed behind segmented networks, protected by strong authentication, and accessed only through controlled remote access paths where remote maintenance is truly required. Operators should change default passwords, remove shared credentials, apply available firmware and software patches, disable unused services, restrict management interfaces, and monitor for unauthorized access attempts.

    Credential hygiene is especially relevant for sites that rely on third-party maintenance providers. Remote access used by vendors, fuel service contractors, or managed service providers can become a weak point if accounts are shared, passwords are reused, or access remains enabled after it is no longer needed. Each account tied to ATG management should be individually assigned, limited by role, and logged.

    Operators should also review ATG configurations for unexplained changes. That includes tank names, product labels, tank geometry, volume settings, alarm thresholds, relay settings, leak detection settings, user accounts, remote access configuration, network settings, and firmware versions. Sudden changes in readings, disabled alarms, failed polling from SCADA systems, abnormal outbound traffic, or repeated login failures should be treated as possible compromise indicators.

    For larger industrial environments, this issue should be handled as part of OT asset management rather than a one-time cleanup. Organizations need an inventory of tank gauges, firmware versions, network exposure, access methods, vendor dependencies, and business processes that rely on ATG data. A device cannot be defended if the organization does not know it exists, where it is reachable from, or what safety decisions depend on it.

    The attacks also show why segmentation alone is not enough if the device is still reachable from the open web. A firewall between IT and OT does little to protect an ATG that has its own exposed management interface. The first control is reducing reachability. The second is hardening access. The third is monitoring for misuse. The fourth is making sure unsafe physical outcomes are blocked by independent engineering controls, such as mechanical valves, local safety mechanisms, and one-way data paths where appropriate.

    The broader lesson is that small industrial devices can create large operational risk. ATGs may not look like high-profile targets, but they sit at the boundary between cyber systems and physical processes. They measure fuel and liquid conditions that operators depend on, and in some cases they can influence alerts or downstream actions. When those devices are exposed, unpatched, or weakly authenticated, they give attackers a way to interfere with the data and controls that keep sites running safely.


    How Can Netizen Help?

    Founded in 2013, Netizen is an award-winning technology firm that develops and leverages cutting-edge solutions to create a more secure, integrated, and automated digital environment for government, defense, and commercial clients worldwide. Our innovative solutions transform complex cybersecurity and technology challenges into strategic advantages by delivering mission-critical capabilities that safeguard and optimize clients’ digital infrastructure. One example of this is our popular “CISO-as-a-Service” offering that enables organizations of any size to access executive level cybersecurity expertise at a fraction of the cost of hiring internally. 

    Netizen also operates a state-of-the-art 24x7x365 Security Operations Center (SOC) that delivers comprehensive cybersecurity monitoring solutions for defense, government, and commercial clients. Our service portfolio includes cybersecurity assessments and advisory, hosted SIEM and EDR/XDR solutions, software assurance, penetration testing, cybersecurity engineering, and compliance audit support. We specialize in serving organizations that operate within some of the world’s most highly sensitive and tightly regulated environments where unwavering security, strict compliance, technical excellence, and operational maturity are non-negotiable requirements. Our proven track record in these domains positions us as the premier trusted partner for organizations where technology reliability and security cannot be compromised.

    Netizen holds ISO 27001, ISO 9001, ISO 20000-1, and CMMI Level III SVC registrations demonstrating the maturity of our operations. We are a proud Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) certified by U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) that has been named multiple times to the Inc. 5000 and Vet 100 lists of the most successful and fastest-growing private companies in the nation. Netizen has also been named a national “Best Workplace” by Inc. Magazine, a multiple awardee of the U.S. Department of Labor HIRE Vets Platinum Medallion for veteran hiring and retention, the Lehigh Valley Business of the Year and Veteran-Owned Business of the Year, and the recipient of dozens of other awards and accolades for innovation, community support, working environment, and growth.

    Looking for expert guidance to secure, automate, and streamline your IT infrastructure and operations? Start the conversation today.


  • Why Traditional Patch Cycles Are Breaking Under AI-Speed Exploitation

    Vulnerability management has always been a race between disclosure, exploitation, prioritization, testing, and remediation. AI is compressing that race. The issue is not simply that attackers have better tools. It is that the entire vulnerability lifecycle is moving faster than the operational processes most organizations use to manage risk.

    For years, vulnerability management programs were built around scheduled scanning, severity scoring, monthly patch windows, asset owners, change control boards, exception tracking, and quarterly reporting. That model assumed there was enough time to discover a flaw, analyze it, assign ownership, test a fix, schedule downtime, and deploy the patch before exploitation became likely at scale.

    That assumption is getting weaker.

    Attackers are using automation and AI-assisted workflows to find exposed systems, summarize advisories, generate exploit logic, adapt proof-of-concept code, chain vulnerabilities, and identify high-value targets. Defenders are also using AI to triage findings, map vulnerabilities to assets, analyze code, detect exploitability, and write remediation guidance. The gap is that offensive use can move at machine speed, but remediation still depends on human ownership, business uptime, legacy systems, vendor support, and operational risk.

    That is the core problem: AI can accelerate vulnerability discovery and exploitation faster than organizations can patch.


    Vulnerability Management Was Already Under Pressure

    The vulnerability ecosystem was strained before AI became a major factor. Modern enterprises manage operating systems, SaaS platforms, firewalls, VPNs, endpoint agents, identity providers, hypervisors, cloud workloads, containers, open-source dependencies, firmware, industrial systems, mobile devices, and third-party software. Each layer introduces new CVEs, new configuration risks, and new remediation paths.

    The volume alone is difficult to manage. A single enterprise scan can produce thousands of findings, many of which are duplicates, false positives, unreachable assets, low-impact issues, or vulnerabilities affecting systems that cannot be patched immediately. Security teams then need to decide which findings create real risk. That decision cannot be made from CVSS alone.

    CVSS measures technical severity, not active exploitation, asset exposure, business impact, reachable attack paths, compensating controls, or attacker interest. A critical vulnerability on an isolated lab server may create less immediate risk than a medium-severity flaw on an internet-facing VPN appliance. A vulnerability with working exploit code, active scanning, and a place in ransomware playbooks deserves a different response than a high-scoring flaw with no known exploitation and limited exposure.

    This is why CISA’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog became so useful. KEV changed the conversation from “What is severe?” to “What is being exploited?” That shift matters. Known exploitation is one of the strongest signals a security team can use when deciding what needs urgent action.

    EPSS pushed the model further by estimating the probability that a CVE will be exploited in the wild in the next 30 days. That makes vulnerability management more dynamic. Rather than treating all high-severity issues the same, teams can combine exploit likelihood, asset criticality, exposure, and business function to rank work in a way that better reflects real risk.

    AI does not replace those models. It makes them more necessary.


    AI Compresses the Time Between Disclosure and Exploitation

    The most serious change is time. A public advisory used to require manual reading, reverse engineering, exploit development, scanning logic, testing, and targeting. Skilled actors could move quickly, but speed was limited by analyst time and technical effort.

    AI-assisted workflows can reduce that friction. A model can summarize an advisory, identify affected versions, extract vulnerable components, compare patch diffs, explain the likely bug class, generate test cases, draft scanner logic, and help modify proof-of-concept code. Some of that work still requires skilled review, but the first pass is faster.

    That speed changes the defender’s side of the equation. A patch released on Tuesday may be evaluated by attackers the same day. A GitHub commit may reveal enough about the vulnerability to guide exploit development. A vendor advisory may be parsed, enriched, and converted into scanning logic before many organizations have assigned the ticket to an owner.

    This does not mean every new CVE becomes a weapon immediately. Many vulnerabilities are hard to exploit, require rare configurations, depend on local access, or have limited impact. The risk is that AI lowers the labor cost of sorting through the noise. Attackers can process more vulnerabilities, discard weak candidates faster, and focus on the small number that are exposed, repeatable, and useful for initial access.

    For defenders, the patch cycle remains slower. Production systems need testing. Network appliances may require maintenance windows. Healthcare, manufacturing, government, and public-sector systems may have uptime constraints. Some vendors release incomplete fixes. Some patches break dependencies. Some assets are unmanaged, forgotten, or owned by third parties. AI can speed up analysis, but it cannot make every business system safe to reboot at noon on a weekday.


    Patch Tuesday Is a Process, Not a Security Boundary

    Monthly patch cycles are useful for operations. They give IT teams a predictable schedule, reduce disruption, and create a repeatable workflow for testing and deployment. The problem is that attackers do not wait for the next maintenance window.

    A monthly patch cadence works best for routine updates and lower-risk vulnerabilities. It is a poor fit for internet-facing systems with known exploitation, public exploit code, or signs of mass scanning. In those cases, the relevant clock starts at disclosure, publication of exploit details, or first exploitation in the wild. That clock may be measured in hours or days, not weeks.

    This is why vulnerability management programs need two tracks. The first is a standard patch process for routine remediation. The second is an emergency exposure-reduction process for high-risk vulnerabilities. The second track cannot depend on the same approvals, timelines, and manual handoffs as routine patching.

    Emergency remediation does not always mean applying a patch immediately. It may mean disabling a vulnerable feature, restricting access at the firewall, removing internet exposure, applying a vendor workaround, rotating credentials, adding detection logic, increasing logging, blocking exploit paths, or isolating a system until a patch can be tested. The objective is to reduce exploitable exposure before the full patch cycle completes.

    AI makes that emergency track more important. If exploit logic can be adapted faster, organizations need the ability to act before a full deployment package is ready.


    The NVD Backlog Shows the Data Problem

    Vulnerability management depends on accurate, enriched, and timely data. That includes CVE descriptions, affected products, CPE mappings, CVSS scores, references, patch links, exploit status, affected versions, and relationships between components. When that data lags, defenders lose time.

    The NVD backlog has exposed how fragile that dependency can be. NIST acknowledged that the NVD developed a major backlog of unenriched CVEs beginning in early 2024 and later changed operations to address record CVE growth. That backlog matters to security teams that rely on enriched NVD data for scanner accuracy, reporting, severity mapping, and automation.

    This is a structural issue. Vulnerability volume is rising, software supply chains are more complex, and the data needed to assess risk is often incomplete at disclosure. AI can help fill gaps by summarizing advisories, mapping affected versions, and linking vulnerability records to patches or commits. It can also introduce risk if it produces confident but incorrect mappings.

    An AI-assisted vulnerability program still needs source validation. A model-generated enrichment should be treated as a lead, not an authoritative record. Security teams need to confirm affected products, versions, exposure, and remediation steps through vendor advisories, asset telemetry, package inventories, and tested detection logic.

    The future of vulnerability management is not blind automation. It is faster enrichment with human review at the points where error creates operational or security risk.


    The Real Bottleneck Is Asset Context

    Most organizations do not fail at vulnerability management because they lack CVE feeds. They fail because they cannot confidently answer basic operational questions fast enough.

    Is the vulnerable product present? Is it running? Is it internet-facing? Which business unit owns it? Is it production or test? Is there sensitive data behind it? Is it reachable from untrusted networks? Is there an exploit available? Is there active exploitation? Is there a compensating control? Can the system be patched without downtime? Is the vulnerable component embedded inside a vendor product? Is the asset managed by internal IT, cloud engineering, a contractor, or a SaaS provider?

    AI can help security teams ask and correlate those questions, but it needs accurate input. Poor asset inventory turns AI into a faster way to produce uncertain conclusions. If scanners disagree, CMDB records are stale, cloud tags are missing, and ownership data is incomplete, AI-assisted prioritization will inherit the same blind spots.

    That is why asset context is now one of the most valuable parts of vulnerability management. A CVE does not become urgent in isolation. It becomes urgent when it maps to a reachable system that matters to the business and has a plausible exploitation path.

    Organizations that know their assets can use AI to move faster. Organizations that do not will spend more time sorting duplicate alerts, chasing owners, and debating whether a finding is real.


    AI Is Changing Both Sides of Prioritization

    On the defensive side, AI can improve vulnerability prioritization in several practical ways. It can summarize long advisories, cluster duplicate findings, map scanner results to asset owners, identify exposed services, compare CVEs against KEV and EPSS, draft remediation tickets, recommend temporary mitigations, and explain exploit paths in plain language for system owners.

    That can save time, mainly in the triage layer. Analysts no longer need to manually read every advisory, deduplicate every scanner result, or write the same remediation note dozens of times. AI can reduce the repetitive work that slows vulnerability programs down.

    The risk is over-trust. AI may misread an advisory, confuse similarly named products, assume exploitability where a required configuration is absent, or miss a vendor-specific mitigation. It may rank a vulnerability highly due to generic severity and miss the fact that the asset is isolated. It may also underrank a medium-severity issue that sits on an externally exposed identity, VPN, or file-transfer system.

    The best use of AI is not to replace vulnerability analysts. It is to give them a faster first draft of the risk picture, with clear links back to evidence.

    On the offensive side, AI helps attackers prioritize too. Threat actors do not need to exploit every CVE. They need to find the few that provide reliable access at scale. AI can help sort advisories, identify exposed targets, build scanner templates, translate exploit logic across environments, and generate payload variations. Even partial assistance can shrink the time between disclosure and operational use.

    This creates an asymmetry. Defenders must fix or reduce exposure across many assets. Attackers only need one viable path.


    Why Exploited Vulnerabilities Need a Different SLA

    Many organizations still use remediation timelines tied mainly to CVSS. Critical vulnerabilities might require remediation within 15 or 30 days. High vulnerabilities may have 30, 60, or 90 days. Mediums may remain open much longer.

    That model breaks down when exploitation is confirmed. A known exploited vulnerability on an internet-facing system should not sit in the same queue as a theoretical critical issue on an internal-only host. KEV status should trigger a different workflow with executive visibility, owner escalation, compensating controls, and strict tracking.

    For federal agencies, CISA’s KEV catalog creates required remediation deadlines. Private-sector organizations can use the same concept even if they are not directly bound by the directive. The logic is sound: if a vulnerability is being used in real attacks, it deserves faster action than a vulnerability with no evidence of exploitation.

    AI strengthens that argument. As exploitation windows shrink, organizations need policies that distinguish routine severity from active threat. A vulnerability management program that treats all critical CVEs the same will waste time on issues that are severe but unlikely, then miss flaws that are already being used by threat actors.

    A stronger SLA model should account for KEV status, EPSS score, internet exposure, asset criticality, exploit availability, ransomware association, privilege level, data sensitivity, and compensating controls. The result should be a risk-based queue, not a severity-only spreadsheet.


    Exposure Reduction Matters as Much as Patching

    Patching is the cleanest fix, but it is not always the fastest risk reduction. AI-driven vulnerability pressure makes exposure management more valuable.

    If a vulnerable system cannot be patched today, teams should ask whether it can be removed from the internet, placed behind VPN, restricted by source IP, segmented, monitored, rate-limited, protected by a virtual patch, or placed behind an application-layer control. For some vulnerabilities, disabling a feature or changing a configuration can reduce risk until a full patch is deployed.

    This matters for systems with fragile uptime requirements. OT environments, healthcare devices, legacy applications, public-sector systems, and vendor-managed appliances may not support rapid patching. Treating patching as the only valid control can leave teams stuck. Treating exposure reduction as part of the remediation workflow gives defenders more options.

    The goal is not to avoid patching. The goal is to survive the period before patching is possible.

    A mature vulnerability program should track both final remediation and interim risk reduction. A ticket should not simply say “patch by Friday.” It should also document whether the system is exposed, what temporary controls are in place, what detection was added, who accepted residual risk, and what date the permanent fix is expected.


    What SOC Teams Should Hunt For

    Vulnerability management cannot remain separate from detection and response. If a vulnerability is being actively exploited, the SOC needs to know where the organization is exposed and what exploitation looks like.

    For a high-risk CVE, the SOC should receive affected asset lists, exploit indicators, expected log sources, network paths, suspicious process behavior, authentication patterns, and known post-exploitation activity. Detection engineers should build or tune rules before patching is complete, especially for internet-facing systems.

    SOC teams should also hunt for scanning and exploitation attempts against exposed services. Web logs, firewall logs, IDS alerts, EDR telemetry, cloud control-plane logs, WAF events, VPN logs, and identity logs can all show signs of exploitation. For network appliances and edge devices, logs may be limited, so teams may need to rely on configuration checks, vendor guidance, packet captures, and upstream telemetry.

    The most useful hunts are tied to the vulnerability’s likely exploitation path. A deserialization bug in a web application, a command injection flaw in a firewall, an authentication bypass in a VPN, and a privilege escalation flaw on an endpoint all require different telemetry. Generic “look for suspicious activity” guidance is too weak during active exploitation.

    AI can help draft hunt logic and summarize expected behaviors, but analysts still need to validate that logic against the actual product, version, environment, and available logs.


    What Security Leaders Should Change

    Security leaders should stop measuring vulnerability management only by total open findings. That metric is often noisy and can reward the wrong behavior. Closing thousands of low-risk findings may look good in a dashboard, but it does not reduce risk if exploited vulnerabilities remain open on exposed systems.

    Better metrics include time to identify exposure for KEV vulnerabilities, time to assign ownership, time to apply interim controls, time to remediate internet-facing exploited vulnerabilities, percentage of critical assets with current owner data, percentage of high-risk findings with compensating controls, and percentage of emergency remediation actions completed within policy.

    Leaders also need to fund the unglamorous parts of the program: asset inventory, configuration management, software ownership, cloud tagging, SBOM ingestion, endpoint coverage, logging, and change process reform. AI tools will underperform if these foundations are weak.

    A stronger program should include a standard patch lane, an emergency remediation lane, a formal exception process, exposure management, KEV and EPSS integration, verified asset ownership, detection handoff, and executive reporting for high-risk delays.


    Where AI Belongs in the Workflow

    AI is useful in vulnerability management when it shortens analysis without removing accountability.

    It can help ingest advisories, translate technical details for asset owners, draft tickets, cluster duplicate findings, map CVEs to CPEs or packages, compare findings against KEV and EPSS, suggest mitigations, generate test plans, and identify likely exploit paths. It can also support code review and dependency analysis by identifying where vulnerable functions or libraries appear across repositories.

    The safest model is evidence-linked automation. Every AI-assisted conclusion should point back to source data: vendor advisory, CVE record, scanner output, package inventory, asset telemetry, code reference, exploit intelligence, or network exposure data. Analysts should be able to see why a vulnerability was ranked, what assumptions were made, and what evidence is missing.

    AI should not silently close findings, approve exceptions, or declare systems safe without verification. It should accelerate the work queue and expose uncertainty, not hide it.


    The New Standard: Continuous Risk Reduction

    The old model treated vulnerability management as a patching function. The new model has to treat it as continuous risk reduction.

    That means the work starts before a patch is available. Teams need to know which systems are exposed, which products are high-value targets, which vendors are slow to patch, which assets lack owners, which controls can reduce exposure fast, and which logs will show exploitation attempts.

    It also means remediation does not end once a patch is installed. Teams still need to verify deployment, check for exploitation that occurred before patching, remove temporary exceptions, confirm vulnerable versions are gone, and review whether the response timeline met policy.

    AI speeds up parts of this process, but it also raises expectations. If attackers can use AI to move faster, defenders need automation, context, and decision authority that can match the pace. A vulnerability program that requires days to determine whether a product exists in the environment will struggle against exploitation timelines measured in hours.


    How Can Netizen Help?

    Founded in 2013, Netizen is an award-winning technology firm that develops and leverages cutting-edge solutions to create a more secure, integrated, and automated digital environment for government, defense, and commercial clients worldwide. Our innovative solutions transform complex cybersecurity and technology challenges into strategic advantages by delivering mission-critical capabilities that safeguard and optimize clients’ digital infrastructure. One example of this is our popular “CISO-as-a-Service” offering that enables organizations of any size to access executive level cybersecurity expertise at a fraction of the cost of hiring internally. 

    Netizen also operates a state-of-the-art 24x7x365 Security Operations Center (SOC) that delivers comprehensive cybersecurity monitoring solutions for defense, government, and commercial clients. Our service portfolio includes cybersecurity assessments and advisory, hosted SIEM and EDR/XDR solutions, software assurance, penetration testing, cybersecurity engineering, and compliance audit support. We specialize in serving organizations that operate within some of the world’s most highly sensitive and tightly regulated environments where unwavering security, strict compliance, technical excellence, and operational maturity are non-negotiable requirements. Our proven track record in these domains positions us as the premier trusted partner for organizations where technology reliability and security cannot be compromised.

    Netizen holds ISO 27001, ISO 9001, ISO 20000-1, and CMMI Level III SVC registrations demonstrating the maturity of our operations. We are a proud Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) certified by U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) that has been named multiple times to the Inc. 5000 and Vet 100 lists of the most successful and fastest-growing private companies in the nation. Netizen has also been named a national “Best Workplace” by Inc. Magazine, a multiple awardee of the U.S. Department of Labor HIRE Vets Platinum Medallion for veteran hiring and retention, the Lehigh Valley Business of the Year and Veteran-Owned Business of the Year, and the recipient of dozens of other awards and accolades for innovation, community support, working environment, and growth.

    Looking for expert guidance to secure, automate, and streamline your IT infrastructure and operations? Start the conversation today.


  • Kali365: The Phishing Kit Built for Microsoft 365 Token Theft

    Kali365 is the latest reminder that Microsoft 365 phishing has moved beyond fake login pages and stolen passwords. According to the FBI, Kali365 is a phishing-as-a-service platform first seen in April 2026 and distributed mainly through Telegram. Its purpose is direct: help attackers obtain Microsoft 365 OAuth access and refresh tokens, bypass common MFA controls, and gain access to Outlook, Teams, OneDrive, and related cloud services without needing to intercept the victim’s password.

    That distinction matters. Many organizations still treat phishing as a credential-theft problem. The assumed attack pattern is familiar: a user receives a malicious email, visits a fake login page, enters a username and password, and maybe approves an MFA prompt. Security teams then respond by resetting the password, checking mailbox rules, and retraining the user.

    Kali365 points to a different model. The attacker may never need the password at all. Instead, the victim is tricked into authorizing a sign-in flow that produces valid tokens for the attacker. Once those tokens are issued, the attacker can use them to access Microsoft 365 resources as the victim. From the defender’s perspective, the activity may look less like malware execution and more like a legitimate cloud session from an identity that already passed authentication.

    That is why this class of attack is better viewed as identity takeover, not simple phishing.


    How Kali365 Changes the Attack Surface

    The FBI describes Kali365 as a platform that gives threat actors access to AI-generated phishing lures, campaign templates, tracking dashboards, and OAuth token capture capability. The phishing-as-a-service model matters as much as the technical method. It reduces the skill required to run campaigns against Microsoft 365 users, packaging cloud identity abuse into a subscription-style criminal service.

    The attack chain described by the FBI relies on Microsoft’s device code flow. Device code authentication is a legitimate OAuth flow used in cases where a device has limited input capability. A user may be asked to visit a Microsoft verification page on another device, enter a short code, and approve access. In legitimate scenarios, this can support sign-in for devices or tools that cannot easily present a full browser-based login process.

    Kali365 turns that pattern into a social engineering path. The attacker sends a phishing message that impersonates a cloud productivity, document-sharing, or collaboration service. The message includes a device code and tells the user to visit a real Microsoft verification page. The user is not sent to a fake Microsoft domain. They are sent to Microsoft infrastructure, which makes the interaction feel more credible than a classic phishing site.

    The victim enters the code, completes the prompts, and unknowingly authorizes the attacker-controlled device or session. At that point, the attacker can obtain OAuth access and refresh tokens. The access token grants access to a protected resource for a limited period. The refresh token can be used to request new access tokens, extending access until the token expires, is revoked, or is blocked by policy.

    The result is a phishing attack that sidesteps many familiar warning signs. The user may not type a password into a fake page. The domain may be legitimate. MFA may be completed. The attacker does not need to guess, spray, or reuse the password. The compromise happens through authorization.


    Why MFA Alone Does Not Solve This

    MFA remains one of the strongest baseline controls against password theft, password spraying, and credential stuffing. It still blocks a large portion of low-effort account compromise. The issue is that many MFA deployments were built to defend against stolen credentials, not stolen sessions or maliciously authorized OAuth flows.

    In a token-based phishing attack, the attacker is not always trying to defeat MFA cryptographically. The attacker is trying to place themselves into an authentication or authorization process that the user completes. Once the user approves the flow, the attacker receives artifacts that represent authenticated access.

    This is the same strategic weakness that made adversary-in-the-middle phishing so damaging. In AiTM phishing, the attacker proxies the sign-in session between the user and the legitimate service. The user completes authentication, and the attacker captures the session cookie or token that proves the session is already authenticated. Microsoft has documented this pattern in earlier Microsoft 365 campaigns where attackers used stolen session material to access mailboxes and then launch business email compromise activity.

    Kali365 follows the same broader trend, but with emphasis on device code abuse and OAuth token capture. The core lesson is that MFA must be paired with controls that account for token issuance, token use, device state, authentication flow, session risk, and phishing-resistant methods.

    Push notifications, SMS codes, voice calls, and one-time passwords can still leave room for social engineering. Phishing-resistant authentication, such as FIDO2 security keys, certificate-based authentication, and platform-bound passwordless methods, raises the bar by tying authentication to the legitimate origin and reducing the ability to replay or proxy the process.


    Why Microsoft 365 Is Such a High-Value Target

    Microsoft 365 accounts are attractive targets because they are rarely isolated accounts. A single compromised identity can expose email, files, chats, calendar data, internal contacts, SharePoint sites, Teams conversations, third-party app access, and password reset messages. For many organizations, Microsoft 365 is also connected to SSO, SaaS applications, device management, compliance workflows, and executive communications.

    Once an attacker takes over a Microsoft 365 identity, the account can become both a data source and a launch point. Outlook can be searched for invoices, wire instructions, contracts, password reset links, VPN instructions, HR documents, client communications, and internal escalation paths. OneDrive and SharePoint may contain proposals, exports, spreadsheets, engineering documents, legal records, or regulated data. Teams can give the attacker context, relationships, and a trusted channel for follow-on phishing.

    That trusted channel is the real force multiplier. A phishing email from an external sender is one problem. A phishing message from a real employee mailbox is far harder for users to dismiss. Internal compromise lets attackers inherit reputation. They can reply to existing threads, use real signatures, reference active projects, and send malicious links to coworkers, customers, vendors, or finance teams.

    This is where phishing turns into identity takeover. The attacker is no longer pretending to be the user from the outside. They are operating through the user’s actual account.


    The Attack Chain in Practice

    A Kali365-style campaign may begin with a message framed around a shared document, compliance notice, Teams invite, voicemail alert, HR workflow, payment file, or internal review. The lure does not need to include malware. It needs to convince the recipient to complete a Microsoft sign-in or device verification action.

    The victim is instructed to enter a device code at a Microsoft verification page. The legitimacy of the Microsoft page lowers suspicion. The user may see familiar tenant branding, normal Microsoft prompts, or expected MFA prompts. To the user, the sequence can appear to be a normal Microsoft 365 authentication step.

    Behind the scenes, the attacker is waiting for the authorization to complete. Once it does, OAuth tokens are issued. Depending on the token, application permissions, user privileges, Conditional Access state, and session controls, the attacker may gain access to Exchange Online, Teams, OneDrive, SharePoint, or other Microsoft 365 resources.

    From there, common post-compromise actions may include mailbox reconnaissance, inbox rule creation, message forwarding, OAuth app abuse, internal phishing, file download, Teams impersonation, persistence through refresh tokens, and attempts to access sensitive SaaS applications tied to the same identity provider.

    The attacker may also use the mailbox to study the organization before acting. They can search for terms like “invoice,” “wire,” “ACH,” “payroll,” “password,” “VPN,” “MFA,” “Duo,” “Okta,” “SharePoint,” “contract,” “legal,” or “W-9.” They can identify who approves payments, who manages vendors, who owns IT workflows, and who communicates with clients. That reconnaissance can feed business email compromise, data theft, extortion, or deeper intrusion attempts.


    Detection Challenges

    Kali365-style activity can be difficult to detect with controls that focus only on links, attachments, or malware. The most meaningful signals often appear in identity, SaaS, and mailbox telemetry.

    Security teams should pay close attention to Microsoft Entra sign-in logs, authentication protocol details, device code flow usage, unfamiliar clients, impossible travel, anomalous IP addresses, new user agents, first-seen applications, risky sign-ins, and changes in session behavior. A device code flow event for a user who never uses device-based sign-in should be treated as high-signal, especially when followed by Exchange, Teams, SharePoint, or OneDrive access from unfamiliar infrastructure.

    Mailbox telemetry is just as valuable. Watch for inbox rule creation, suspicious forwarding, mass message access, unusual search behavior, deletion of security alerts, new mail transport patterns, and outbound phishing from a previously normal user. In many Microsoft 365 incidents, the first clear evidence of compromise is not the initial phish. It is the mailbox behavior after access has been gained.

    OAuth and application activity also matter. Teams should review new app consents, unusual delegated permissions, token use from unmanaged devices, suspicious consent grants, and access patterns that do not match the user’s normal work behavior. Identity takeover often becomes durable through permissions, sessions, and trusted cloud workflows rather than through malware persistence on an endpoint.

    A practical detection strategy should correlate events across Microsoft Entra ID, Exchange Online, Defender for Office 365, Defender for Cloud Apps, endpoint telemetry, and SIEM data. A single sign-in event may not prove compromise. A device code flow event followed by mailbox search activity, inbox rule creation, and SharePoint downloads from a new ASN is a much stronger case.


    Controls That Matter

    The FBI’s guidance centers on limiting device code flow abuse. Organizations should audit legitimate device code flow usage, then use Conditional Access to block or restrict it. For most users, device code flow is unnecessary. Where it is needed, exceptions should be narrow, documented, and monitored.

    Microsoft Entra Conditional Access can be used to block authentication flows such as device code flow. This should be tested in report-only mode first, then moved into enforcement after legitimate business dependencies are identified. Emergency access accounts need careful handling so organizations do not lock themselves out during policy rollout.

    Authentication transfer policies also deserve review. Microsoft provides controls to block authentication transfer, which can reduce abuse of flows where a user transfers authentication from one device context to another. This is relevant to the same broader problem: attackers manipulating legitimate authentication features to obtain valid access.

    Phishing-resistant MFA should be prioritized for administrators, finance users, executives, help desk staff, HR staff, and users with access to sensitive data or broad SaaS privileges. Regular MFA is still useful, but high-risk roles need authentication methods that resist token replay and real-time social engineering. FIDO2 security keys and certificate-based authentication are stronger options than push approval or one-time passcodes.

    Session controls should also be tightened. Sign-in frequency, persistent browser session restrictions, compliant-device requirements, device state checks, risk-based Conditional Access, and app-enforced restrictions can reduce the useful life of stolen tokens. These controls must be balanced against operational impact, but leaving long-lived sessions broadly available creates an opening for token theft campaigns.

    For incident response, password reset alone is insufficient. If OAuth or refresh tokens may have been stolen, responders should revoke sessions, invalidate refresh tokens, review app consents, remove malicious inbox rules, disable forwarding, inspect mailbox audit logs, review recent file access, check Teams activity, and search for follow-on phishing sent from the account. The account should be treated as an active cloud compromise, not a simple password event.


    What SOC Teams Should Hunt For

    SOC teams should build detections around abnormal device code flow usage. Start with a baseline of accounts and resource accounts that legitimately use device code authentication. Any new usage outside that baseline should be reviewed. High-value users should generate higher-severity alerts.

    Look for Microsoft 365 sign-ins where the authentication protocol or flow indicates device code use, followed by access to Exchange Online, SharePoint, OneDrive, or Teams from a new location, new ASN, unmanaged device, or unfamiliar client. Look for a user completing a device code flow shortly after receiving an external email containing Microsoft verification instructions or document-sharing language.

    Mailbox hunting should include new inbox rules that move, delete, mark read, or forward messages. Rules targeting words like “invoice,” “payment,” “wire,” “MFA,” “security,” “alert,” or “password” are especially suspicious. External forwarding and hidden forwarding deserve high priority.

    Teams hunting should include unusual direct messages from compromised users, new links sent to many recipients, and messages referencing document access, urgent review, or code entry. Internal phishing over Teams can spread quickly, and users may trust it more than email.

    File access hunting should include mass downloads, access to sensitive SharePoint paths, downloads from new IP ranges, and access to files unrelated to the user’s role. Identity takeover often includes quiet collection before the attacker sends the next lure.

    OAuth hunting should include new delegated permissions, unusual app consent, unknown client IDs, and tokens issued to applications that do not align with normal user activity. Attackers may use OAuth access to avoid older indicators such as mailbox login through a browser.


    What Executives Need to Understand

    Kali365 is not just another phishing kit. It reflects a larger shift in how attackers target cloud-first organizations. The user account has become the control plane. If an attacker can control an identity, they may not need malware, lateral movement, or exploit chains to cause damage. They can access data, impersonate trusted employees, manipulate financial workflows, and compromise more users from inside the tenant.

    That changes how organizations should measure phishing risk. Click rates and training completion are not enough. Leaders should ask whether the organization can block risky authentication flows, enforce phishing-resistant MFA for high-risk users, detect token misuse, revoke sessions during an incident, and correlate identity activity with mailbox and SaaS behavior.

    Microsoft 365 security cannot be treated as an email-filtering problem alone. The defensive model has to include identity governance, Conditional Access, token lifecycle management, app consent control, mailbox auditing, SaaS monitoring, and tested response playbooks.


    The Bottom Line

    Kali365 shows where Microsoft 365 phishing is headed. Attackers are moving from credential theft to session and token abuse, using legitimate Microsoft authentication flows and phishing-as-a-service tooling to gain access that looks valid at first glance.

    The right response is not to abandon MFA. It is to mature beyond basic MFA. Organizations need phishing-resistant authentication, restricted device code flow, stronger Conditional Access policies, tighter session controls, OAuth visibility, and SOC detections built around identity behavior after authentication.

    The central question is no longer whether a user entered a password into a fake page. The better question is whether an attacker obtained a valid way to act as that user inside Microsoft 365. Kali365 makes that risk clear, and it should push security teams to treat cloud identity as one of the primary attack surfaces in the enterprise.


    How Can Netizen Help?

    Founded in 2013, Netizen is an award-winning technology firm that develops and leverages cutting-edge solutions to create a more secure, integrated, and automated digital environment for government, defense, and commercial clients worldwide. Our innovative solutions transform complex cybersecurity and technology challenges into strategic advantages by delivering mission-critical capabilities that safeguard and optimize clients’ digital infrastructure. One example of this is our popular “CISO-as-a-Service” offering that enables organizations of any size to access executive level cybersecurity expertise at a fraction of the cost of hiring internally. 

    Netizen also operates a state-of-the-art 24x7x365 Security Operations Center (SOC) that delivers comprehensive cybersecurity monitoring solutions for defense, government, and commercial clients. Our service portfolio includes cybersecurity assessments and advisory, hosted SIEM and EDR/XDR solutions, software assurance, penetration testing, cybersecurity engineering, and compliance audit support. We specialize in serving organizations that operate within some of the world’s most highly sensitive and tightly regulated environments where unwavering security, strict compliance, technical excellence, and operational maturity are non-negotiable requirements. Our proven track record in these domains positions us as the premier trusted partner for organizations where technology reliability and security cannot be compromised.

    Netizen holds ISO 27001, ISO 9001, ISO 20000-1, and CMMI Level III SVC registrations demonstrating the maturity of our operations. We are a proud Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) certified by U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) that has been named multiple times to the Inc. 5000 and Vet 100 lists of the most successful and fastest-growing private companies in the nation. Netizen has also been named a national “Best Workplace” by Inc. Magazine, a multiple awardee of the U.S. Department of Labor HIRE Vets Platinum Medallion for veteran hiring and retention, the Lehigh Valley Business of the Year and Veteran-Owned Business of the Year, and the recipient of dozens of other awards and accolades for innovation, community support, working environment, and growth.

    Looking for expert guidance to secure, automate, and streamline your IT infrastructure and operations? Start the conversation today.


  • Microsoft Faces Researcher Backlash After Public Zero-Day Releases

    Microsoft is facing criticism from the cybersecurity community after a public dispute with an anonymous researcher escalated into a series of Windows zero-day releases, emergency mitigation guidance, and a broader argument over how major vendors handle vulnerability disclosure.

    The researcher, known publicly as Chaotic Eclipse or Nightmare-Eclipse, has published multiple proof-of-concept exploits for Windows flaws in recent weeks. The releases began in early April with BlueHammer, a Microsoft Defender local privilege escalation vulnerability now tracked as CVE-2026-33825. The researcher later released exploit code for additional issues referred to as RedSun, UnDefend, YellowKey, GreenPlasma, and MiniPlasma.

    Microsoft responded in a May 27 post from the Microsoft Security Response Center, saying the vulnerabilities were not shared with the company before publication. MSRC said the disclosures created unnecessary customer risk and criticized the publication of proof-of-concept code for unpatched flaws. The same post said Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit would continue bringing cases against actors and those enabling criminal activity, coordinating with law enforcement where needed.

    That language triggered immediate pushback. Many researchers read the statement as a warning that Microsoft could pursue legal action against people who publicly release security research, even in cases where the researcher claims a vendor mishandled the report. Microsoft later clarified that it had no intention of pursuing action against individuals conducting or publishing security research, and said law enforcement involvement would apply to unlawful activity that causes real customer harm.

    The clarification softened the immediate controversy, but it did not settle the larger issue. The dispute has placed renewed attention on coordinated vulnerability disclosure, bug bounty expectations, vendor response times, and the increasingly short period between public exploit release and real-world abuse.


    The Timeline: From BlueHammer to MiniPlasma

    The first major release in the sequence was BlueHammer, a Microsoft Defender vulnerability tracked as CVE-2026-33825. NVD describes the flaw as insufficient granularity of access control in Microsoft Defender that allows an authorized attacker to elevate privileges locally. The vulnerability received a CVSS v3.1 score of 7.8, with high impact to confidentiality, integrity, and availability.

    BlueHammer drew attention due to the component involved. Defender is not a niche Windows feature; it is a central endpoint security control for many organizations. A privilege escalation flaw in a defensive product creates a different risk profile than a similar bug in an ordinary desktop application. An attacker who already has local access can potentially use the issue to move into a more privileged position on the same host.

    Huntress later reported that it observed BlueHammer, RedSun, and UnDefend tooling during a live intrusion investigation in April. The company said the activity was tied to suspicious FortiGate SSL VPN access and included staged binaries in user-writable directories, hands-on-keyboard reconnaissance, and suspicious tunneling behavior. Huntress said the observed tools did not appear to succeed in that case, but the finding still showed that public proof-of-concept tooling had moved beyond research discussion and into intrusion activity.

    Microsoft patched BlueHammer in April, and CISA added CVE-2026-33825 to the Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog on April 22. Federal civilian agencies were directed to apply mitigations or discontinue use of the affected product by May 6.

    The next major issues tied to the same dispute were RedSun and UnDefend. Public reporting and researcher statements have linked RedSun to CVE-2026-41091 and UnDefend to CVE-2026-45498. CVE-2026-41091 is a Microsoft Defender elevation of privilege vulnerability caused by improper link resolution before file access. CVE-2026-45498 is a Microsoft Defender denial-of-service vulnerability. CISA added both to the KEV catalog on May 20, setting a June 3 deadline for federal civilian agencies to remediate.

    YellowKey widened the scope of the dispute beyond Defender. Microsoft assigned CVE-2026-45585 to the issue, describing it as a Windows BitLocker security feature bypass. Public reporting described YellowKey as a physical-access attack affecting certain Windows 11 and Windows Server systems, with Microsoft issuing mitigation guidance before a full security update was available. That detail matters for organizations with mobile workforces, executive devices, stolen-device risk, regulated data, or systems exposed to repair, travel, or shared physical access.

    GreenPlasma and MiniPlasma added further pressure. ThreatLocker reported that MiniPlasma could elevate a standard user to SYSTEM on fully patched Windows 11 systems at the time of its analysis. SecurityAffairs described MiniPlasma as a privilege escalation issue related to a Windows Cloud Files driver path and noted that the researcher claimed the underlying issue had been believed patched years earlier. As of Microsoft’s May 27 MSRC statement, the company named both GreenPlasma and MiniPlasma as part of the same group of uncoordinated disclosures.


    Why Microsoft’s Legal Language Drew Such a Strong Reaction

    The security community’s reaction was not only about the zero-days themselves. It was about the message Microsoft appeared to send to researchers.

    Coordinated disclosure relies on trust between vendors and the people who find flaws. Researchers need to believe that submissions will be reviewed fairly, credited accurately, and compensated when bounty program criteria are met. Vendors need enough time to reproduce bugs, assess affected products, engineer fixes, test updates, and prepare customer guidance. When either side believes the process has failed, the outcome can move from private reporting to public conflict.

    Microsoft’s MSRC post argued from the customer protection side. The company said uncoordinated disclosure placed proof-of-concept code for unpatched vulnerabilities into the hands of bad actors. That concern is practical. Public exploit code can be copied, compiled, modified, and tested by criminal operators, initial access brokers, ransomware affiliates, and opportunistic attackers.

    Researchers objected to the perceived legal threat. Public disclosure has long been controversial, but it is also one of the pressure mechanisms researchers use when they believe a vendor has ignored or minimized a report. Some vulnerability disclosure experts argue that threatening researchers can produce a worse outcome: private sale to exploit brokers, quiet use by offensive firms, or total non-disclosure that leaves users exposed without any public warning.

    Microsoft’s later clarification attempted to separate security research from criminal activity. The company said it would not pursue action against individuals conducting or publishing research. Still, the episode damaged confidence among parts of the research community, especially those already critical of large-vendor bug handling.


    The Enterprise Risk Is Bigger Than the Disclosure Fight

    For defenders, the main issue is not whether one researcher or one vendor is more at fault. The issue is what happens once working exploit code becomes public.

    Local privilege escalation vulnerabilities can be underrated in enterprise prioritization. They do not usually provide initial access by themselves, so they can look less urgent than internet-facing remote code execution flaws, VPN vulnerabilities, exposed identity systems, or browser zero-days. That view can miss their operational value to attackers.

    A local privilege escalation bug is often useful after initial access. Once an attacker has a foothold through stolen credentials, phishing, malware, remote access abuse, or an exposed service, privilege escalation can help them disable controls, access sensitive files, dump credentials, install persistence, or move laterally. A SYSTEM-level process on a Windows endpoint can be far more damaging than a low-privilege user session.

    That risk becomes more serious when the vulnerable component is a security control. Defender vulnerabilities can affect the product that security teams rely on for prevention, detection, and response. BitLocker bypasses can affect data-at-rest protections. Denial-of-service issues in endpoint security tools can create temporary gaps that attackers can exploit during staging or execution.

    The Huntress findings show how this risk can appear during a real intrusion. The observed activity included public Nightmare-Eclipse tooling staged from user-writable paths, reconnaissance commands such as whoami /priv and cmdkey /list, and a suspicious tunneling binary. That pattern is consistent with a post-access operator testing ways to escalate privileges, understand the environment, and maintain reach into internal systems.


    What the Defender Vulnerabilities Mean in Practice

    BlueHammer, RedSun, and UnDefend all matter due to the defensive product involved. They are not identical flaws, but they point to the same broader issue: endpoint security tools operate with high trust and high privilege, and attackers can gain leverage when those tools mishandle files, links, updates, scanning, or remediation paths.

    CVE-2026-33825, BlueHammer, is described by NVD as a Microsoft Defender access control issue that allows local privilege escalation. The CVSS vector shows local attack vector, low attack complexity, low privileges required, no user interaction, and high impact across confidentiality, integrity, and availability.

    CVE-2026-41091, associated in public reporting with RedSun, is described as improper link resolution before file access in Microsoft Defender. Microsoft’s description indicates that a successful attacker could gain SYSTEM privileges. That type of flaw can be useful after a workstation or server has already been accessed through another path.

    CVE-2026-45498, associated in public reporting with UnDefend, is described as a Microsoft Defender denial-of-service vulnerability. A denial-of-service flaw against an endpoint protection component can still have security value to an attacker if it interferes with detection, updates, or normal protective behavior during an intrusion.

    Microsoft has issued updates for the Defender flaws, and Defender normally receives engine and platform updates automatically in default configurations. Enterprise teams should still verify actual versions on endpoints. Defender versioning can be confusing, since the product has separate engine, platform, product, service, and security intelligence versions. A patch dashboard showing “Defender updated” may not prove that the affected engine or platform component reached the fixed build.


    YellowKey Brings Physical Access Back Into the Discussion

    YellowKey is different from the Defender flaws. It concerns BitLocker, Windows Recovery Environment behavior, and physical access to a device. Microsoft assigned it CVE-2026-45585 and issued mitigation guidance after public proof-of-concept release.

    Physical access requirements can make a vulnerability seem less urgent, but that depends on the organization. Laptops, executive devices, field systems, shared workstations, and devices sent for repair all have different physical exposure than a locked server in a controlled facility. Organizations with sensitive local data, legal data, healthcare data, government information, defense-related data, or regulated records should treat a BitLocker bypass as more than a theoretical edge case.

    The practical question is whether the organization relies on TPM-only BitLocker protection on devices that can be lost, stolen, handled by third parties, or accessed in the field. In those environments, physical-access vulnerabilities can affect incident response assumptions after device loss. A stolen laptop is no longer a routine asset replacement issue if the encryption control may be bypassed under certain conditions.


    What Security Teams Should Do Now

    Organizations using Microsoft Defender should verify that affected endpoints have received the relevant Defender engine and platform updates. CVE-2026-33825 should be treated as patched or mitigated according to Microsoft guidance, with KEV status taken as a signal for higher priority. CVE-2026-41091 and CVE-2026-45498 should be validated against Microsoft’s fixed versions and CISA’s June 3 deadline for federal civilian agencies.

    Security teams should also hunt for signs of attempted use. The Huntress reporting provides useful behavioral patterns, including execution from user-writable paths, filenames aligned with public tooling, suspicious EICAR-triggering behavior tied to unknown binaries, reconnaissance commands, and tunneling activity. Production systems should not be tested with public exploit code. Validation should be done through patch evidence, telemetry review, and controlled lab reproduction only where authorized.

    For YellowKey, organizations should review Microsoft’s mitigation guidance and assess exposure based on device class. A domain controller in a locked room and an executive laptop passing through airports do not share the same physical-risk profile. Devices that store sensitive local data and rely on TPM-only BitLocker protection deserve special attention.

    Incident response teams should also update their zero-day playbooks. Public exploit releases tied to security products should trigger faster review than ordinary software flaws. That process should include asset identification, affected version validation, compensating controls, detection engineering, executive notification criteria, and post-remediation verification.


    How Can Netizen Help?

    Founded in 2013, Netizen is an award-winning technology firm that develops and leverages cutting-edge solutions to create a more secure, integrated, and automated digital environment for government, defense, and commercial clients worldwide. Our innovative solutions transform complex cybersecurity and technology challenges into strategic advantages by delivering mission-critical capabilities that safeguard and optimize clients’ digital infrastructure. One example of this is our popular “CISO-as-a-Service” offering that enables organizations of any size to access executive level cybersecurity expertise at a fraction of the cost of hiring internally. 

    Netizen also operates a state-of-the-art 24x7x365 Security Operations Center (SOC) that delivers comprehensive cybersecurity monitoring solutions for defense, government, and commercial clients. Our service portfolio includes cybersecurity assessments and advisory, hosted SIEM and EDR/XDR solutions, software assurance, penetration testing, cybersecurity engineering, and compliance audit support. We specialize in serving organizations that operate within some of the world’s most highly sensitive and tightly regulated environments where unwavering security, strict compliance, technical excellence, and operational maturity are non-negotiable requirements. Our proven track record in these domains positions us as the premier trusted partner for organizations where technology reliability and security cannot be compromised.

    Netizen holds ISO 27001, ISO 9001, ISO 20000-1, and CMMI Level III SVC registrations demonstrating the maturity of our operations. We are a proud Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) certified by U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) that has been named multiple times to the Inc. 5000 and Vet 100 lists of the most successful and fastest-growing private companies in the nation. Netizen has also been named a national “Best Workplace” by Inc. Magazine, a multiple awardee of the U.S. Department of Labor HIRE Vets Platinum Medallion for veteran hiring and retention, the Lehigh Valley Business of the Year and Veteran-Owned Business of the Year, and the recipient of dozens of other awards and accolades for innovation, community support, working environment, and growth.

    Looking for expert guidance to secure, automate, and streamline your IT infrastructure and operations? Start the conversation today.