Author: Robert Timlick

  • After Mythos: New Playbooks For a Zero-Window Era

    After Mythos: New Playbooks For a Zero-Window Era

    When patching isn’t fast enough, NDR helps contain the next era of threats.
    If you’ve been tracking advancements in AI, you know the exploit window, the short buffer that organizations relied on to patch and protect after a vulnerability disclosure, is closing fast.
    Anthropic’s new model, Claude Mythos, and its Project Glasswing, showed that finding exploitable vulnerabilities and subtle cracks
  • Chinese Silk Typhoon Hacker Extradited to U.S. Over COVID Research Cyberattacks

    Chinese Silk Typhoon Hacker Extradited to U.S. Over COVID Research Cyberattacks

    A Chinese national accused of being a member of the Silk Typhoon hacking group has been extradited to the U.S. from Italy. 
    Xu Zewei, 34, was arrested in July 2025 by Italian authorities for his alleged links to the Chinese state-sponsored threat group and for orchestrating cyber attacks against American organizations and government agencies between February 2020 and June 2021, including
  • Microsoft Patches Entra ID Role Flaw That Enabled Service Principal Takeover

    Microsoft Patches Entra ID Role Flaw That Enabled Service Principal Takeover

    An administrative role meant for artificial intelligence (AI) agents within Microsoft Entra ID could enable privilege escalation and identity takeover attacks, according to new findings from Silverfort.
    Agent ID Administrator is a privileged built-in role introduced by Microsoft as part of its agent identity platform to handle all aspects of an AI agent’s identity lifecycle operations in a
  • HD 52 Candidate David Osborn campaign comes to Hood River

    HD 52 Candidate David Osborn campaign comes to Hood River

    Free news: HOOD RIVER — David Osborn’s campaign marked the beginning of the final month of the House District 52 primary with a major canvass in Hood River on Saturday, bringing together a broad coalition of supporters, endorsing organizations, and…
  • Checkmarx Confirms GitHub Repository Data Posted on Dark Web After March 23 Attack

    Checkmarx Confirms GitHub Repository Data Posted on Dark Web After March 23 Attack

    Checkmarx has disclosed that its ongoing investigation tied to the supply chain security incident has revealed that a cybercriminal group published data related to the company on the dark web.
    “Based on current evidence, we believe this data originated from Checkmarx’s GitHub repository, and that access to that repository was facilitated through the initial supply chain attack of March 23, 2026,
  • Mythos Changed the Math on Vulnerability Discovery. Most Teams Aren’t Ready for the Remediation Side

    Mythos Changed the Math on Vulnerability Discovery. Most Teams Aren’t Ready for the Remediation Side

    Anthropic’s Claude Mythos Preview has dominated security discussions since its April 7 announcement. Early reporting describes a powerful cybersecurity-focused AI system capable of identifying vulnerabilities at scale and raising serious questions about how quickly organizations can validate, prioritize, and remediate what it finds.
    The debate that followed has mostly focused on the right
  • Fake CAPTCHA IRSF Scam and 120 Keitaro Campaigns Drive Global SMS, Crypto Fraud

    Fake CAPTCHA IRSF Scam and 120 Keitaro Campaigns Drive Global SMS, Crypto Fraud

    Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed details of a telecommunications fraud campaign that uses fake CAPTCHA verification tricks to dupe unsuspecting users into sending international text messages that incur charges on their mobile bills, generating illicit revenue for the threat actors who lease the phone numbers.
    According to a new report published by Infoblox, the operation is believed to
  • The 2026 Guide to Uncovering Unsanctioned Cloud Apps

    The 2026 Guide to Uncovering Unsanctioned Cloud Apps

    If you want to uncover unsanctioned cloud apps, don’t begin with a policy. Start with your browser history.

    The cloud environment most businesses actually use rarely matches the one shown on the IT diagram. It’s built through countless small shortcuts: a “just this once” file share, a free tool that solves one problem faster, a plug-in installed to meet a deadline, or an AI feature quietly enabled inside an app you already pay for.

    In the moment, none of it feels like a problem. It feels efficient. Helpful.

    Until it isn’t. Then you realize business data is scattered across tools you didn’t formally approve, accounts you can’t easily offboard, and sharing settings that don’t reflect the actual risk.

    Why Unsanctioned Cloud Apps Are a 2026 Problem

    Unsanctioned cloud apps have always existed. What’s changed this year is the scale, the speed, and the fact that “cloud apps” now include AI features hiding in plain sight.

    Start with scale. Microsoft’s shadow IT guidance points out that most IT teams assume employees use “30 or 40” cloud apps, but “in reality, the average is over 1,000 separate apps.”

    It also notes that “80% of employees use non-sanctioned apps” that haven’t been reviewed against company policy. That’s the uncomfortable reality of unsanctioned cloud apps: the gap between what you believe is happening and what’s actually happening is often far wider than expected.

    Now add the 2026 twist: AI isn’t just a standalone tool employees consciously choose to use.

    The Cloud Security Alliance notes that AI is increasingly embedded as a feature within everyday business applications, rather than existing only as a standalone tool. In other words, you can have shadow AI risk without anyone signing up for a new AI product. It’s just… there.

    That creates a different kind of exposure. The same Cloud Security Alliance article cites research showing “54% of employees” admit they would use AI tools even without company authorization.

    It also references an IBM finding that “20% of organizations” experienced breaches linked to unauthorized AI use, adding an average of “$670,000” to breach costs.

    So, this isn’t just a governance problem. It’s a measurable risk problem.

    And here’s the final reason 2026 feels different: the old “block it and move on” strategy no longer works. The Cloud Security Alliance has pointed out that simply blocking cloud apps isn’t an option anymore because cloud services are woven into everyday work. If you don’t provide a secure alternative, employees will find another workaround.

    Don’t Start with Blocking

    The fastest way to drive cloud app usage further underground is to treat it as a discipline problem and respond with bans.

    Yes, some applications do need to be blocked. But if blocking is your first move, it typically creates two unintended side effects:

    1. People get better at hiding what they’re doing.
    2. They switch to a different tool that’s just as risky or, sometimes, worse.

    Either way, you haven’t reduced the problem. You’ve just made it harder to see.

    A better starting point is to understand what’s happening and why.

    The recommendation is to evaluate cloud app risk against an “objective yardstick”. You should monitor what users are actually doing in those apps so you can focus on the behavior that creates exposure, not just the name of the tool.

    Once you have that visibility, you can respond in a way that actually lasts. Some apps will be approved. Others may be restricted. Some will need to be replaced.

    And the truly high-risk ones? Those are the apps you block thoughtfully, with a clear plan, a communication message, and a secure alternative that allows people to keep doing their jobs.

    The Practical Workflow to Uncover Unsanctioned Cloud Apps

    This isn’t a one-time clean-up. It’s a workflow you can run quarterly (or continuously) to stay ahead of new tools and new habits.

    Discover What’s Actually in Use

    Start by generating a real inventory from the signals you already collect: endpoint telemetry, identity logs, network and DNS data, and browser activity.

    Microsoft’s shadow IT tutorial emphasizes a dedicated discovery phase, because you can’t manage what you haven’t first identified.

    Analyze Usage Patterns

    Don’t stop at identifying which apps are in use.

    Review things like:

    • Who is accessing cloud apps
    • What admin activity is happening
    • Whether data is being shared publicly or with personal accounts
    • Access that should no longer exist, such as former employees who still have active connections

    Score and Prioritize Risk

    Not every unsanctioned app is equally dangerous.

    Use a simple risk lens:

    • The sensitivity of the data involved
    • How information is being shared
    • The strength of identity controls
    • The level of administrative visibility
    • Whether AI features could be ingesting or exposing data

    Tag Apps

    Make decisions visible and repeatable by tagging apps.

    Microsoft explicitly calls tagging apps as sanctioned or unsanctioned an important step, because it lets you filter, track progress, and drive consistent action over time.

    Take Action

    Once an app is tagged, you can enforce the decision.

    Microsoft’s governance guidance outlines two practical responses: issuing user warnings, a lighter control that encourages better behavior, or blocking access to applications that present unacceptable risk.

    Just keep in mind that changes aren’t always immediate. Plan for communication and a smooth transition, rather than triggering unexpected disruptions.

    Your New Default: Discover, Decide, Enforce

    Unsanctioned cloud apps aren’t disappearing in 2026. If anything, they’ll continue to multiply, especially as new AI features appear inside the tools your team already relies on.

    The goal isn’t to block everything. It’s to create a repeatable operating model: discover what’s in use, determine what’s acceptable, and enforce those decisions with clear guidance and secure alternatives.

    When you apply that consistently, cloud app sprawl stops being a surprise. It becomes another controlled, managed part of your environment.

    If you’d like help building a practical cloud app governance process that fits your organization, contact us today. We’ll help you gain visibility, reduce exposure, and put guardrails in place, without slowing productivity.

    Featured Image Credit

    This Article has been Republished with Permission from The Technology Press.

  • Researchers Uncover Pre-Stuxnet ‘fast16’ Malware Targeting Engineering Software

    Researchers Uncover Pre-Stuxnet ‘fast16’ Malware Targeting Engineering Software

    Cybersecurity researchers have discovered a new Lua-based malware created years before the notorious Stuxnet worm that aimed to sabotage Iran’s nuclear program by destroying uranium enrichment centrifuges.
    According to a new report published by SentinelOne, the previously undocumented cyber sabotage framework dates back to 2005, primarily targeting high-precision calculation software to tamper
  • CISA Adds 4 Exploited Flaws to KEV, Sets May 2026 Federal Deadline

    CISA Adds 4 Exploited Flaws to KEV, Sets May 2026 Federal Deadline

    The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) on Friday added four vulnerabilities impacting SimpleHelp, Samsung MagicINFO 9 Server, and D-Link DIR-823X series routers to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog, citing evidence of active exploitation.
    The list of vulnerabilities is below –

    CVE-2024-57726 (CVSS score: 9.9) – A missing authorization vulnerability in