Archive for February 19, 2026

The CISA Has Provided Two Warnings That You Should Pay Attention To

Posted in Commentary with tags on February 19, 2026 by itnerd

The CISA has given US government agencies three days to patch their systems against a maximum-severity hardcoded credential vulnerability (CVE-2026-22769)in Dell’s RecoverPoint solution exploited by the UNC6201 Chinese hacking group since mid-2024 https://www.cisa.gov/news-events/alerts/2026/02/18/cisa-adds-two-known-exploited-vulnerabilities-catalog.

Ensar Seker, CISO at threat intelligence company SOCRadar:

“When CISA orders agencies to patch within three days, that signals confirmed active exploitation and real operational risk. This is not theoretical exposure. A hardcoded credential vulnerability like CVE-2026-22769 effectively removes authentication as a barrier. If exploited, it can lead to root-level persistence, which is extremely difficult to detect and eradicate.

“The three-day mandate reflects two things: first, the vulnerability likely provides reliable post-exploitation value; second, federal systems running backup and recovery platforms are high-value targets. Backup infrastructure is especially sensitive because compromising it weakens an organization’s last line of defense against ransomware and destructive attacks. What makes this particularly concerning is that exploitation reportedly began in mid-2024. That means adversaries may have had months of dwell time in some environments. Even after patching, agencies must assume possible compromise and validate integrity, credentials, and persistence mechanisms.

“The real takeaway for enterprises is this: if federal agencies get three days, the private sector should not assume they have three weeks. When a vulnerability combines maximum severity, hardcoded credentials, and active exploitation, patching becomes a board-level risk discussion, not just an IT task.”

On top of that, the CISA published an advisory warning that a critical security vulnerability (CVE-2026-1670) has been identified in four Honeywell CCTV camera models that could allow attackers to bypass authentication and take control of device accounts.

The flaw is classified as “missing authentication for critical function” and has been given a CVSS severity score of 9.8.

According to the advisory, the vulnerability stems from an unauthenticated API endpoint that lets attackers remotely change the “forgot password” recovery email address associated with a camera account. By modifying this recovery email without needing credentials, an attacker could potentially take over the account and gain unauthorized access to live camera feeds or administrative functions.

Honeywell is a widely deployed global supplier of security and video surveillance equipment, including many NDAA-compliant cameras used in government, industrial, and commercial critical infrastructure environments. 

Nick Mo, CEO & Co-founder, Ridge Security Technology Inc. provided this comment:

   “IoT assets like cameras and smart printers remain massive security blind spots. While organizations obsess over protecting “crown jewel” databases, attackers exploit these overlooked devices as easy entry points.

   “The Honeywell zero-day (CVE-2026-1670) shows how a single vulnerability in a CCTV system can compromise critical infrastructure. Whether it’s a sophisticated exploit or a basic failure—like the 2025 Louvre heist where the password was just “Louvre”—the risk is the same: neglected hardware creates an open door.

   “Security testing must include every connected device. Find the holes before the hacker does.”

Michael Bell, Founder & CEO, Suzu Labs had this comment:

   “The device you installed to protect the building just became the way into the network. CVE-2026-1670 lets an unauthenticated attacker change the password recovery email on affected Honeywell cameras and take over the account, no credentials needed. These are NDAA-compliant models that go into government facilities and critical infrastructure, and the vulnerability is an open API endpoint on a password reset function.

   “A physical security contractor puts the cameras up, plugs them into whatever network is available, and IT may never know they’re there. Nobody patches a device nobody knows they own, and nobody segments a device that isn’t in the asset inventory. CISA hasn’t seen active exploitation yet, so there’s still a window to get ahead of this one.”

John Carberry, Solution Sleuth, Xcape, Inc. adds this comment:

   “The discovery of CVE-2026-1670 in Honeywell CCTV cameras serves as a stark reminder that the surveillance systems safeguarding our critical infrastructure are frequently exposed to the public Internet. By leaving a “forgot password” API endpoint unauthenticated, Honeywell inadvertently enabled remote hijacking of device accounts. Attackers could simply redirect recovery emails to themselves, gaining unauthorized access.

   “This vulnerability, boasting a near-perfect CVSS score of 9.8, grants attackers a straightforward route from digital compromise to physical surveillance. This affects NDAA-compliant systems in government and industrial sectors. For Security Operations Center (SOC) teams, the presence of these devices on public-facing networks without VPNs or stringent access controls now constitutes an immediate liability.

   “This issue highlights a fundamental lapse in secure-by-design principles for hardware entrusted with protecting our most sensitive assets. As we increasingly adopt “smart” security solutions for our perimeters, it’s crucial to understand that an unpatched camera is not only a guardian, but it can also become an open portal for pivoting to other sensitive systems.

   “Organizations utilizing affected models must prioritize firmware updates, limit external access through network segmentation, and diligently monitor for any unauthorized configuration changes.

   “When your security cameras can be commandeered remotely, the watcher becomes the watched.”

The CISA does a lot of good work to keep people safe from a cybersecurity standpoint. Thus I would heed their warnings and take action ASAP when they appear.

Cayosoft Captures Record Market Momentum in 2025

Posted in Commentary with tags on February 19, 2026 by itnerd

Cayosoft today reported record growth, product innovation and customer momentum in 2025. Cayosoft significantly expanded its presence across enterprise and government sectors, adding the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), U.S. Department of War (DoW), CCL Industries, athenahealth, Australian Trade and Investment Commission, and Heartland Coca-Cola, among others. The company also invested in new technology innovations and earned industry accolades from Gartner, CISA, and other organizations.

Used by 90% of large organizations worldwide, Microsoft Active Directory and Entra ID remain the backbone of enterprise identity, serving as the central hub for managing permissions, logins, and access. Cayosoft delivers the industry’s only unified solution for identity security and operational resilience that supports all on-premises and cloud Microsoft environments, including Active Directory, Entra ID,  Microsoft 365, and Intune. 

In addition to expanding its customer base, Cayosoft achieved other significant milestones and accolades last year, including: 

Industry Recognition & Analyst Validation 

In 2025, Cayosoft earned expanded industry and analyst acclaim, including:

  • Named a finalist for the InfoWorld 2025 Technology of the Year Award in Cloud Backup and Disaster Recovery.
  • Affirmed the technical and economic advantages of Cayosoft Guardian Instant Forest Recovery by analyst firm Paradigm Technica, validating that the Cayosoft solution is at least 99% faster than specialized or general-purpose alternatives—setting a new industry benchmark for identity resilience.
  • Featured in seven Gartner reports in the last 12 months, including a newly released January 2026 report, Market Guide for Microsoft 365 Governance Tools, reinforcing Cayosoft’s growing influence and credibility with prominent analysts and enterprise buyers. 
  • Recognized by CISA and listed on the Secure by Design page, validating Cayosoft’s secure-by-default approach to identity governance and resilience.

Product Adoption, Innovation & Velocity

Cayosoft’s innovation engine saw one of its biggest years ever:

  • Secured SOC 2 Type II certification, reinforcing its commitment to enterprise-grade security and compliance and confirming that Cayosoft maintains robust, independently audited security controls that perform effectively over an extended period.
  • Delivered over 148 net-new features and enhancements in Cayosoft’s core platform in 2025, reflecting one of the most active innovation cycles in the company’s history.
  • Released Cayosoft Guardian Protector, the industry’s first free, always-on threat detection for Active Directory and Entra ID. 
  • Announced the upcoming Cayosoft Guardian SaaS to be generally available in Q2 2026.

Business Momentum, Customer Expansion & Adoption 

Cayosoft reported 76% year-over-year annual recurring revenue growth, driven by:

  • A significant increase in net-new enterprise customers and expanding adoption across highly regulated industries and complex environments. 
  • Continued strength in legacy AD vendor tool replacement business from Quest Software and Semperis.
  • Strong demand and traction from large enterprises and state, local and federal government organizations, including:
  • Heartland Coca-Cola
  • Australian Trade and Investment Commission
  • Los Angeles County Employees Retirement Association (LACERA)
  • CCL Industries
  • athenahealth
  • Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
  • U.S. Department of War (DoW) 
  • Yukon Hospital Organization

For more information about Cayosoft’s solutions for managing and protecting the modern Microsoft enterprise, visit cayosoft.com.  

Hackers Target Microsoft Entra Accounts in Device Code Vishing

Posted in Commentary with tags on February 19, 2026 by itnerd

It is being reported hackers are targeting technology, manufacturing, and financial organizations in campaigns that leverage device code phishing with voice phishing (vishing) to abuse the OAuth 2.0 Device Authorization flow and compromise Microsoft Entra accounts.

Unlike previous attacks that utilized malicious OAuth applications to compromise accounts, these campaigns instead leverage legitimate Microsoft OAuth client IDs and the device authorization flow to trick victims into authenticating.

This provides attackers with valid authentication tokens that can be used to access the victim’s account without relying on regular phishing sites that steal passwords or intercept multi-factor authentication codes.

Ensar Seker, CISO at SOCRadar, commented:

“This campaign is significant because it doesn’t break authentication, it abuses it. The OAuth 2.0 Device Authorization flow was designed for usability across limited-input devices, but attackers are now socially engineering users into completing legitimate device login prompts under the guise of IT support or security validation. By leveraging real Microsoft OAuth client IDs instead of malicious apps, adversaries avoid many traditional detection controls. The result is a valid authentication token issued by Microsoft itself, which means no password theft, no MFA bypass exploit, just human manipulation.

“What makes this especially dangerous for enterprises is that many security programs still focus heavily on credential phishing indicators, fake domains, cloned login pages and MFA fatigue. Device code phishing shifts the battlefield into token abuse and session hijacking. Once the attacker has a valid access token tied to Entra ID, they can move laterally into M365, SharePoint, Teams, and potentially pivot toward financial fraud or data exfiltration without triggering obvious alerts.

‘If ShinyHunters is indeed involved, it signals continued evolution from traditional data-theft extortion toward identity-centric compromise models. Identity is the new perimeter, and OAuth abuse is becoming a preferred entry point because it blends into normal authentication telemetry.

“From a defensive standpoint, organizations need to restrict or monitor the Device Authorization flow where not required, enforce Conditional Access policies that bind tokens to compliant devices, reduce token lifetimes, enable sign-in risk policies, and implement stronger session monitoring. Security teams should also train employees that legitimate IT will never ask them to manually enter device codes shared over the phone.

“This is not a vulnerability in Microsoft Entra, it’s a design feature being exploited through social engineering. The real lesson is that modern attacks increasingly weaponize legitimate cloud workflows rather than exploit technical flaws.”

This is a very good time to start looking at your Microsoft Entra setup to make sure that you are not vulnerable. Because now that this is being used by one group of threat actors, it will be used by others soon enough.

Liquibase Secure 5.1 Extends Modeled Change Control to Snowflake

Posted in Commentary with tags on February 19, 2026 by itnerd

Liquibase, the leader in Database Change Governance, today announced the release of Liquibase Secure 5.1, extending modeled Change Control to Snowflake. With 5.1, enterprises can govern Snowflake control plane changes with the same rigor and automation they already apply to schema evolution, closing a critical gap in data platform security, compliance, and AI readiness. Liquibase Secure 5.1 also expands database platform coverage, including new support for additional cloud and enterprise data stores.

Snowflake has become mission-critical infrastructure for analytics, data products, and AI initiatives. As organizations scale DataOps and internal developer platforms, Snowflake changes are no longer isolated technical updates. They are platform-level changes that impact trust, availability, and every downstream consumer. Yet many of the most consequential changes still happen outside standardized governance, often delivered as scripts with limited visibility, weak enforcement, and evidence that is difficult to assemble when it matters most.

Modeled Change Control for Snowflake

Liquibase Secure 5.1 treats key Snowflake control plane changes as first-class, modeled change types, rather than opaque scripts. That modeling enables precise policy enforcement, object-aware drift detection, and audit-ready evidence at the level where access, movement, and execution are defined.

With Liquibase Secure 5.1, data platform teams can govern Snowflake changes across access and security configuration, data sharing and movement, platform and cost controls, and automated execution, using standardized workflows across environments and teams.

Key outcomes include:

  • Stop risky Snowflake control plane changes before they reach production
  • Standardize how Snowflake changes are delivered across environments and teams
  • Automatically generate audit-ready evidence for every change
  • Detect drift and out-of-band updates to governed Snowflake objects
  • Recover faster with traceable, reversible changes and tested rollback procedures

This closes a long-standing gap for organizations that govern schema evolution, yet still struggle with over-permission creep, ungoverned data movement, and control plane drift that can undermine security posture and AI initiatives.

Built for DataOps, data products, and AI readiness

As Snowflake increasingly powers feature engineering, model training, and AI-driven decisioning, the blast radius of ungoverned change grows. A single access change can expose sensitive training data. An unreviewed sharing update can expand compliance scope. An execution change can silently alter business-critical logic. Liquibase Secure 5.1 helps data platform teams keep Snowflake predictable, auditable, and reliable as usage scales, without turning governance into a bottleneck.

Expanding database support across Liquibase’s industry-leading coverage

Liquibase Secure continues to deliver broad database coverage across 60+ platforms, from mainframe DB2 to cloud-native data stores. Liquibase Secure 5.1 expands support for Snowflake, Databricks, and MongoDB, and adds new platform support for Couchbase, AWS Keyspaces, DataStax Enterprise, and AlloyDB for Google Cloud. This breadth helps enterprises standardize change governance across heterogeneous environments using a single platform instead of stitching together siloed tools and processes. Teams can apply consistent workflows and generate unified, audit-ready evidence across their database estate, reducing operational overhead while preserving the flexibility to adopt new technologies without rebuilding governance each time.

Enterprise partnership, not just tooling

Liquibase brings more than a decade of frontline experience helping enterprises govern database change at scale. In addition to the platform, Liquibase provides hands-on professional services, a dedicated customer success organization, and ongoing advisory support to help teams operationalize Change Control across their delivery model.

Availability

Liquibase Secure 5.1 is available now. To learn more about Change Control for Snowflake and Database Change Governance, visit liquibase.com.

Compliance Scorecard Launches v10

Posted in Commentary with tags on February 19, 2026 by itnerd

As cyber insurers and regulators begin scrutinizing how AI is used in compliance workflows, Compliance Scorecard has launched v10 – a governed AI system designed to produce audit-ready compliance rather than conversational guesses.

The milestone 10th release introduces what the company calls a “GRC Context Engine” – AI that is visible, editable, and defensible. Unlike black-box AI tools that hide their reasoning, v10 exposes the governance layer to MSPs: every prompt can be viewed and modified, context is explicitly configured rather than inferred, and all changes are version-controlled.

v10 treats AI as a governed system of context and controls, not a conversational interface.

Why This Matters Now

Regulators, cyber insurers, and customers are changing the questions they ask. It is no longer sufficient to show a policy exists – organizations must demonstrate their people understood it. It is no longer enough to run an assessment – auditors want to know how conclusions were reached and why they should be trusted.

For MSPs adding AI to their compliance workflows, this creates a new category of liability: if you cannot explain what the AI did and why you trusted its output, you are taking on risk you cannot quantify or defend.

Built on Defensible Data

v10 builds AI capabilities on structured compliance data maintained in the Compliance Scorecard Vendor Tool, a free, publicly accessible database refined over several years with MSP community input. The dataset includes 1,200+ security tools from 866+ vendors, mapped to 101+ compliance frameworks with over 200,000 normalized control mappings – maintained to exclude marketing claims and keep compliance data accurate.

Governed by Design

v10 includes 30+ purpose-built AI prompts across 12 workflow categories – policy, assessment, analysis, recommendations, risk, reports, and evidence – each fully editable with version control. The platform supports multiple AI providers including OpenAI, Microsoft Azure OpenAI, Anthropic (Claude), and Google Gemini, with Bring Your Own Key functionality that keeps API credentials encrypted using AES-256.

From Acknowledgment to Informed Behavior

v10 reframes policy management around comprehension. The platform generates assessment questions from policy content, translates technical language into plain-language explanations at configurable reading levels, and documents that employees understood the policy before signing off – not just that they clicked “I agree.”

The ultimate objective is not policy acknowledgment, but informed behavior.

Availability

v10 is available immediately to all Compliance Scorecard customers. New customers can request a demo at compliancescorecard.com. All AI-powered features, including BYOK support, are included at no additional cost.

Abstract Launches AI-Gen Composable SIEM, Redefining the Future of Security Operations

Posted in Commentary on February 19, 2026 by itnerd

Abstract Security, the leader in streaming-first security data operations, today announced the launch of AI-Gen Composable SIEM, a new architectural standard for modern security operations built natively for AI, streaming data, and modular control. 

The launch follows a breakout 2025 for Abstract, including:

  • 380% year-over-year ARR growth
  • 280% increase in new customers
  • 240% net revenue retention
  • 40 strategic hires to support enterprise expansion

As security data volumes grow 25-30% annually as AI exhaust and multi-cloud complexity accelerate, traditional SIEM platforms have struggled to keep pace. AI-Gen Composable SIEM represents a fundamental shift away from monolithic architectures toward a modular, streaming-first model where ingestion, pipelines, storage, detection, AI triage, and response operate as composable building blocks.

What AI-Gen Composable SIEM Means

AI-Gen Composable SIEM introduces a system-of-systems architecture that enables organizations to:

  • Decouple data sources and destinations to eliminate vendor lock-in
  • Run detections in-stream for near real-time threat response
  • Tier and route data intelligently to reduce storage costs
  • Embed AI across workflows for triage, investigation, and response
  • Scale elastically across multi-cloud and hybrid environments

Unlike legacy platforms that centralize all functionality into a single stack, AI-Gen Composable SIEM allows enterprises to choose their architecture, deployment model, and analytics engines without sacrificing performance or control. 

From Signal to Scale

Abstract enters 2026 under the theme Signal to Scale, reflecting the company’s focus on expanding adoption of the AI-Gen model across enterprise and regulated markets.

Security leaders are increasingly prioritizing data strategy as the foundation of effective AI-driven security operations. By shifting analytics left into the data stream and embedding AI natively into detection and response workflows, Abstract customers report:

  • 65–75% reduction in SIEM-related costs
  • Faster mean time to detect (MTTD)
  • Faster mean time to respond (MTTR)

Founded in 2023, Abstract has raised $28.5 million across seed and Series A funding and continues to expand its enterprise footprint across Fortune 1000 and global organizations. Abstract prides itself with providing easy-to-use solutions, but also providing first class customer service for all customers and partners.

Abstract will be at RSAC in March and the team is available for product demonstrations and conversations. To schedule a meeting at RSA, visit this link.

Additional Information