A Security Growth Platform is the more precise name for what MSPs and MSSPs need from the software
Author: Robert Timlick
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The Security Growth Platform: Why MSPs Are Moving Beyond vCISO Tools
Three years ago, the practical question for an MSP building a cybersecurity practice was which “vCISO platform” to buy. The term was good shorthand for the work at the time: assessments, advisory, reporting, maybe a compliance module bolted on the side. The work has since outgrown the descriptor. -

Critical WP Maps Pro Flaw Actively Exploited to Create Admin Accounts
Threat actors are attempting to actively exploit a critical security flaw impacting WP Maps Pro, a WordPress plugin that has had over 15,000 sales on the Envato Market, to create malicious administrator accounts on susceptible sites.WP Maps Pro allows site owners to embed customizable Google Maps and OpenStreetMap with markers, listings, and advanced location features on WordPress sites. It is
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Dutch Authorities Dismantle Botnet Linked to 17 Million Infected Devices
Dutch authorities have announced the takedown of a botnet that enslaved millions of infected devices, including computers, tablets, smartphones, and IoT devices, to carry out malicious attacks.The bot network, per the Dutch Politie and the National Cyber Security Center (NCSC), consisted of at least 17 million infected devices. More than 200 servers located in the Netherlands acted as the
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The “Session Cookie” Hijack: Why MFA Can’t Always Save You
MFA is a strong front-door lock. But it’s not the only thing that decides whether someone can get in.
After you sign in, your browser keeps you logged in using a session token (often stored as a cookie). It’s the digital version of a wristband at an event: once you’ve been checked, the wristband proves you belong there. If an attacker steals that wristband, they may not need to beat your MFA prompt at all.
That’s the core of session cookie hijacking. The attacker isn’t “cracking” MFA. They’re skipping it by replaying your already authenticated session.
This isn’t a reason to stop using MFA. It’s a reason to stop treating MFA as the finish line.
When sessions can be stolen, the practical defence shifts to layered controls: phishing-resistant sign-ins, device hygiene, tighter session policies, and detection that catches suspicious access early.
Why MFA Isn’t a “Game Over” Control
MFA is still one of the best upgrades most businesses can make, but it doesn’t end an attack on its own. The reason is that attackers don’t always try to beat the login step. They try to go around it.
Cloudflare notes that “attackers are finding new ways to circumvent MFA” and that modern incidents are rarely one isolated technique. They’re “part of a chain of attacks.”
In other words, MFA can block a lot of credential theft, but it doesn’t automatically protect what happens after a user successfully signs in.
That’s where session cookie hijacking comes in.
Microsoft has described adversary-in-the-middle phishing campaigns where attackers use a reverse-proxy site to “steal and intercept” a user’s password and the session cookie that proves they have an authenticated session.
This is “not a vulnerability in MFA.” The attacker isn’t breaking the MFA. They’re reusing the session.
What a Session Cookie Is and Why Attackers Want It
When you sign into a web app, the site needs a way to remember that you’ve already proved who you are. That’s what a session is: a temporary “logged-in” state that saves you from entering your password and MFA code on every click.
Kaspersky explains that session hijacking is “sometimes called cookie hijacking” because cookies are commonly used to store the session identifier that keeps you authenticated.
Attackers want that session identifier because it’s the shortcut.
Proofpoint describes session tokens as digital “keys” that let a user stay authenticated. It warns that stealing valid tokens lets attackers impersonate legitimate users and potentially bypass authentication measures “like MFA.”
That’s why session cookie hijacking is so highly leveraged.
If an attacker can steal the cookie or token that represents your active session, they’re not trying to defeat the login process. They’re attempting to reuse what you already completed, and access the same apps and data as if they were sitting at your keyboard.
How Session Cookie Hijacking Actually Happens
A lot of teams picture “account takeover” as someone guessing a password or tricking a user into approving an MFA prompt.
Session cookie hijacking is different. The attacker’s goal is to steal the proof that you’re already logged in, then reuse it, often without triggering another sign-in challenge.
1.) AiTM phishing
Adversary-in-the-middle (AiTM) phishing is the “proxy login” trap.
You think you’re signing into a normal service, but you’re actually signing into a lookalike page that sits between you and the real site. The attacker relays the login in real time, so everything appears to work, including MFA.
Attackers use AiTM phishing sites to “steal and intercept” a user’s password and the session cookie that proves the authenticated session. This is “not a vulnerability in MFA.” The attacker isn’t breaking the MFA. They’re capturing the session after MFA is completed and reusing it.
One such campaign “attempted to target more than 10,000 organisations” since September 2021, which shows how scalable this approach has become.
2.) Browser-in-the-Middle session stealing
Browser-in-the-middle (BitM) is similar in spirit, but it’s even more “hands-on” from the attacker’s side.
Instead of stealing a password and running away, the attacker effectively places themselves in control of the browsing session.
Google’s threat intelligence says, “Stealing this session token is the equivalent of stealing the authenticated session.” Once the token is stolen, “an adversary would no longer need to perform the MFA challenge.”
In other words, the attacker isn’t trying to authenticate instead of you. They’re trying to ride along after you’ve authenticated.
3.) Cookie theft from the endpoint
Not every session hijack starts with a fancy proxy. Sometimes the attacker simply steals session data from the device itself.
Stealing valid session tokens allows attackers to impersonate legitimate users. Tokens act like digital “keys.” If an endpoint is compromised, those “keys” can be extracted and reused.
Invicti explains that an attacker steals HTTP cookies and can gain access. The goal is often to obtain sensitive information stored in cookies.
MFA Is a Baseline, Not a Finish Line
MFA is still essential. It blocks a huge amount of credential theft and makes basic account takeover harder. But session cookie hijacking is a reminder that attackers don’t always try to defeat the login step. Sometimes they reuse what happens after it.
The practical response is layered and realistic. Make phishing harder to pull off, and treat device health as part of identity. Tighten session behaviour for high-risk apps. Watch for suspicious access patterns that suggest a session is being replayed.
When those controls work together, MFA stops being a comforting checkbox and becomes what it should be: a strong baseline that’s backed by protections around the session itself.
Contact us today for help protecting your login sessions from hijacking.
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This Article has been Republished with Permission from The Technology Press.
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PAN-OS GlobalProtect Authentication Bypass (CVE-2026-0257) Under Active Exploitation
Palo Alto Networks has warned that a recently disclosed medium-severity security flaw impacting PAN-OS and Prisma Access has come under active exploitation in the wild.The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2026-0257 (CVSS score: 7.8), refers to a case of authentication bypass that could be exploited by bad actors to set up VPN connections.
“Authentication bypass vulnerabilities in the
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ChatGPhish Vulnerability Turns ChatGPT Web Summaries Into a Phishing Surface
Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed details of a vulnerability in OpenAI ChatGPT that leverages the artificial intelligence (AI) assistant’s implicit trust in Markdown links and images to trigger prompt injections and open the door to phishing attacks.The technique has been codenamed ChatGPhish by Permiso Security.
“The chatgpt.com response renderer trusts Markdown links and Markdown
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Attackers Use LLM Agent for Post-Exploitation After Marimo CVE-2026-39987 Exploit
An unknown threat actor has been observed using a large language model (LLM) agent to conduct post-compromise actions after obtaining initial access following the exploitation of a publicly-accessible Marimo network using a recently disclosed vulnerability.“The attacker compromised an internet-reachable Marimo notebook via CVE-2026-39987, extracted two cloud credentials from the compromised
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New Russian-Linked GREYVIBE Targets Ukraine with AI-Powered Cyberattacks
A previously undocumented threat actor dubbed GREYVIBE has been attributed to ongoing and persistent attacks targeting Ukraine and Ukraine-related entities since at least August 2025.GREYVIBE, per WithSecure, is assessed to be a Russian-speaking group operating broadly in the Russian time zone, with the activities aligning with Kremlin state interests, specifically when it comes to
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Malicious Sicoob NuGet Steals Banking Credentials as npm Packages Target Cloud Secrets
Cybersecurity researchers have discovered a malicious NuGet package that masquerades as a C# software development kit for Sicoob, one of Brazil’s largest cooperative financial systems, to siphon client IDs and PFX certificates.According to Socket, versions 2.0.0 through 2.0.4 of “Sicoob.Sdk” contain functionality to exfiltrate sensitive information, including PFX certificates that are used to
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Kimsuky Deploys HTTPSpy, Expands Arsenal with HelloDoor and VS Code Tunnels
The North Korean state-sponsored threat actor known as Kimsuky (aka Velvet Chollima) has been attributed to a fresh set of cyber attacks targeting South Korean military and corporate entities through March and April 2026.“Kimsuky employed a range of tailored social engineering tactics, such as spoofing security software installation pages and crafting a fake Webex meeting page that leveraged
