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Did you know that unpatched vulnerabilities in IT management tools can serve as a direct doorway for cybercriminals—leading to ransomware outbreaks, massive data breaches, and even nationwide supply chain compromises? The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has just added two critical flaws in N-able N-central to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog. This is not a routine security advisory—these are flaws that attackers are actively weaponizing. If your business uses N-central, the clock to patch is already ticking.
Did you know a single hidden backdoor in one widely used open-source tool could compromise millions of systems worldwide?
That’s exactly what happened with XZ Utils—a seemingly harmless compression utility that ships with multiple Linux distributions.
In late March 2024, security researchers discovered that the latest versions of XZ Utils had been secretly modified to include a remote access backdoor. This wasn’t just a routine vulnerability—it was a carefully planned software supply chain attack.
Did you know that more than 2 million organizations worldwide rely on TETRA (Terrestrial Trunked Radio) systems for their “secure” voice and data communications? These systems have been trusted for decades by law enforcement, military, transportation, utilities, and emergency services.
But a recent, bombshell discovery has revealed critical encryption flaws in TETRA—flaws that have quietly existed for decades—leaving these organizations dangerously exposed to cyberattacks.
For sectors where secure communication is the backbone of operations, this is more than a technical issue—it’s a national security risk.