Vendors
-
Adobe says Analytics ingestion bug caused some customers’ data to appear in other tenants
Adobe said an ingestion bug in Analytics Edge caused some organisations’ data to appear in other customers’ analytics instances between Sept. 17 and Sept. 18, 2025; Adobe is cleaning impacted datasets and a customer advisory seen by BleepingComputer instructs deletion of affected data and backups.
-
High-severity flaw in Red Hat OpenShift AI could allow full cluster takeover, vendor warns
Red Hat warned that a CVE-2025-10725 flaw in OpenShift AI, scored 9.9 by CVSS, could let a low-privileged authenticated user escalate to cluster administrator, enabling data theft, service disruption and full platform takeover; Red Hat and a Bugzilla report provided mitigation steps and urged urgent patching and investigation.
-
US Air Force investigating ‘privacy-related issue’ after alleged SharePoint notice
The Department of the Air Force is investigating a “privacy-related issue” after an alleged notice said USAF SharePoint permissions exposed PII and PHI and that SharePoint, Teams and Power BI might be blocked; officials have provided limited confirmation and Microsoft declined to comment.
-
Okta says North Korean ‘IT worker’ scam is targeting healthcare, finance and AI hiring
Okta Threat Intelligence reported that nearly half of companies targeted by a North Korean-linked fake remote-worker scheme are outside IT, with rising activity in healthcare, finance and AI hiring; the firm tracked over 130 identities tied to more than 6,500 interviews from 2021 to mid-2025 and warned the sample likely understates the full scale.
-
Researchers say low-cost DDR4 interposer can bypass Intel and AMD memory protections
Researchers at KU Leuven and the University of Birmingham say a low-cost DDR4 interposer called Battering RAM can redirect physical addresses to bypass Intel SGX and AMD SEV-SNP protections in cloud confidential computing, potentially allowing plaintext reads, data corruption and persistent backdoors.
-
Breach of RemoteCOM surveillance service exposes records of nearly 14,000 monitored people
A breach of RemoteCOM’s SCOUT monitoring system exposed nearly 14,000 records of people under court supervision and contact details for thousands of officers, with leaked files showing device monitoring data, activity alerts and fees for monitored individuals.
-
CISA to end cooperative agreement and federal funding for Center for Internet Security
CISA said it will end its cooperative agreement with the Center for Internet Security on Sept. 30, 2025, ceasing federal funding for programs such as the MS-ISAC. CIS said it will shift MS-ISAC to a fee-based model after federal cuts, and officials warned the move could affect threat-sharing and election security.
-
Asahi suspends Japan operations after cyberattack
Asahi Group Holdings said a cyberattack has forced a halt to ordering, shipping and customer service operations in Japan; the company is investigating and said there is no confirmed data leakage so far but gave no recovery timeline.
-
Akira campaign bypasses OTP MFA on SonicWall VPNs, researchers say
Researchers report the Akira ransomware group has successfully logged into SonicWall SSL VPN accounts protected by OTP MFA, possibly using previously stolen OTP seeds. Vendors including SonicWall and Arctic Wolf advise installing updates and resetting VPN credentials while investigations continue.
-
Fake Microsoft Teams installers promoted in search ads deliver Oyster backdoor, researchers say
Search ads and SEO poisoning have been used to promote fake Microsoft Teams installers that deliver the Oyster backdoor to Windows machines, researchers said; the trojanized installer drops a DLL and creates a scheduled task for persistence.










