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Microsoft breaks Patch Tuesday record with 206 vulnerabilities

Microsoft addressed a whopping 206 vulnerabilities lurking in its vast portfolio of business products and foundational systems in this month’s Patch Tuesday update, marking the vendor’s largest monthly batch of security patches on record, according to researchers.

The massive assortment of vulnerabilities in Microsoft’s latest defect dump accentuates an alarming trend across technology — fears and warnings about a roaring flood of error-riddled software have materialized. And the disease is spreading. 

“It is extraordinary that Microsoft can produce so many patches in a single month, but it does raise concerns,” Dustin Childs, head of threat awareness at Trend Micro’s Zero Day Initiative, wrote in a blog post Tuesday.

Researchers consistently highlight the role artificial intelligence is playing in discovering more vulnerabilities and aiding in the development of patches and testing. Childs isn’t alone in wondering if this is the new normal and how that will impact defenders’ strategies for patch prioritization and deployment. 

“Pandora’s proverbial box has been opened, and as more advanced AI models become available, we expect the norm to continue upward across the board, not just for Patch Tuesday,” Satnam Narang, senior staff research engineer at Tenable, said in an email.

This vulnerability flood isn’t a one-off or rare event. Half of Microsoft’s Patch Tuesday updates through the first half of this year contained a volume of defects well into the triple digits. 

“The current number of CVEs shipped by Microsoft this year exceeds the total number of CVEs shipped in all of 2018,” Childs wrote. 

Microsoft disclosed three vulnerabilities — CVE-2026-45586, CVE-2026-50507 and CVE-2026-49160 — that were publicly known at the time of release, but not yet exploited in the wild, according to the company. 

Yet, in an out-of-band update May 19, the vendor did disclose and release a patch for CVE-2026-41091, an actively exploited zero-day vulnerability affecting Microsoft Defender.

Microsoft disclosed one max-severity vulnerability — CVE-2026-48567, affecting Azure HorizonDB — and nine defects with critical CVSS ratings. The company designated 15 of the vulnerabilities it addressed this month as more likely to be exploited.

The full list of vulnerabilities addressed this month is available in Microsoft’s Security Response Center.

The post Microsoft breaks Patch Tuesday record with 206 vulnerabilities appeared first on CyberScoop.

Interpol leads cybercrime crackdown across 13 countries in Middle East, North Africa

Interpol coordinated an expansive investigation with 13 countries in the Middle East and North Africa to disrupt and take down cybercrime operations, including phishing services and tools, malware and scams. The law enforcement effort netted 201 arrests, led to the seizure of 53 servers and disrupted multiple cybercrime services, Interpol said Monday.

Operation Ramz, which the law enforcement organization said was the first large-scale effort of its kind in the region, also identified 382 suspects over a four-month period ending in February. The collective countermeasures allowed authorities to pin the various malicious activities to nearly 4,000 victims.

“In a world where cybercriminals exploit the digital landscape without borders, Operation Rams demonstrates the effectiveness of global collaboration,” Neal Jetton, Interpol’s director of cybercrime, said in a statement.

Police in Jordan tracked down a computer involved in financial fraud scams and, during a raid, found 15 people carrying out the scams who were later determined to be victims of human trafficking. The victims were recruited under false promises of employment from their home countries in Asia and had their passports confiscated upon arrival in Jordan, officials said. 

A pair of ringleaders behind the operation, who forced or coerced the victims to participate in the scheme, were arrested, according to Interpol. 

Law enforcement agencies in Algeria dismantled a phishing service by seizing a server and other devices linked to the operation. Moroccan authorities also seized multiple devices containing banking data and software for phishing operations.

Officials in Oman remediated a server containing sensitive information that was infected with malware, and compromised by vulnerabilities. Meanwhile, investigators in Qatar identified and secured multiple compromised devices that were being used, unbeknownst to their owners, of spreading malicious threats. 

Authorities involved in the months-long effort gathered almost 8,000 pieces of data that was shared among participating countries to support ongoing investigations.

Operation Ramz was supported by Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Tunisia and the United Arab Emirates. Multiple companies and organizations also helped Interpol track illegal cyber activities and identify malicious servers, including Group-IB, Kaspersky, the Shadowserver Foundation, Team Cymru and Trend Micro. 

“Interpol is dedicated to working with its member countries and private sector partners to take down malicious infrastructure, disrupt criminal groups and bring perpetrators to justice,” Jetton said.

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Microsoft addresses 137 vulnerabilities in May’s Patch Tuesday, including 13 rated critical

Microsoft addressed another triple-digit batch of vulnerabilities cutting across its various enterprise products, components and underlying systems. Yet despite the high number of defects, the vendor reported no actively exploited zero-days in this month’s Patch Tuesday update.

Thirteen of the 137 vulnerabilities Microsoft disclosed were assigned critical CVSS ratings, including a pair of vulnerabilities affecting Azure — CVE-2026-33109 and CVE-2026-42823 — and CVE-2026-42898 in Microsoft Dynamics 365 with 9.9 CVSS scores. 

The company designated 13 vulnerabilities as more likely to be exploited, and 113 defects as less likely or unlikely to be exploited.

The high volume of vulnerabilities reflects a growing trend researchers have been anticipating as artificial intelligence models are deployed to find previously uncovered defects in code. 

While not all of these bugs were found by AI, it’s likely they had an AI-related component — even if it was just AI writing the submission,” Dustin Childs, head of threat awareness at Trend Micro’s Zero Day Initiative, wrote in a blog post Tuesday.

Childs was especially intrigued by CVE-2026-41096, which he described as a “nasty-looking bug” in Microsoft Windows DNS that allows unauthorized attackers to run code remotely. 

“No authentication or user interaction needed, and since the DNS Client runs on virtually every Windows machine, the attack surface is enormous. An attacker with a position to influence DNS responses could achieve unauthenticated remote-code execution across your enterprise,” he added. 

Childs also described CVE-2026-41089, a Windows Netlogon defect that allows unauthenticated remote attackers to run code, as the “highest-impact bug that requires immediate patching,” adding that a “compromised domain controller is a compromised domain.”

Jack Bicer, director of vulnerability research at Action1, called out CVE-2026-42898, the critical vulnerability affecting Microsoft Dynamics 365. 

“With no user interaction required, and the potential to impact systems beyond the vulnerable component’s original security scope, this vulnerability poses serious enterprise risk: an attacker with only basic access could turn a business application server into a remote execution platform,” he said in a blog post.

“Compromise of Dynamics 365 infrastructure can expose customer records, operational workflows, financial information, and integrated business systems. Since CRM environments often connect with identity services, databases, and enterprise applications, successful exploitation could lead to broader organizational compromise and operational disruption,” Bicer added.

The full list of vulnerabilities addressed this month is available in Microsoft’s Security Response Center.

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Microsoft drops its second-largest monthly batch of defects on record

Microsoft addressed 165 vulnerabilities affecting its various products and underlying systems, including one actively exploited vulnerability in Microsoft Office SharePoint, in this month’s Patch Tuesday update

“By my count, this is the second-largest monthly release in Microsoft’s history,” Dustin Childs, head of threat awareness at Trend Micro’s Zero Day Initiative, wrote in a blog post Tuesday.

Microsoft didn’t explain why its monthly batch of patches grew so large this month, but Childs noted that many vulnerability programs are experiencing a significant increase in submissions found by artificial intelligence tools. “For us, our incoming rate has essentially tripled, making triage a challenge, to say the least,” he added. 

The zero-day vulnerability — CVE-2026-32201 — has a CVSS rating of 6.5 and allows attackers to view sensitive information and make changes to disclosed information. Microsoft said the improper input validation defect in Microsoft Office SharePoint allows unauthenticated attackers to perform spoofing over a network.

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency added the zero-day to its known exploited vulnerabilities catalog shortly after Microsoft’s disclosure. 

Microsoft also addressed a high-severity vulnerability — CVE-2026-33825 — that was publicly known at the time of release. The vendor said the defect in Microsoft Defender is more likely to be exploited and could allow unauthorized attackers to elevate privileges locally.

“What starts as a foothold can quickly become full system domination,” Jack Bicer, director of vulnerability research at Action1, said in a blog post about the vulnerability. 

“Once exploited, it allows full control over endpoints, enabling data exfiltration, disabling security tools and lateral movement across networks,” Bicer said.

Proof-of-concept exploit code for the defect is publicly available, which increases the likelihood of exploitation in the wild, he added.

Microsoft disclosed two critical vulnerabilities this month — CVE-2026-33824 affecting Windows IKE Extension and CVE-2026-26149 affecting Microsoft Power Apps — but designated both of the defects as less likely to be exploited.

More than three-quarters of the vulnerabilities disclosed this month are less likely to be exploited, according to Microsoft. Meanwhile, the company designated 19 vulnerabilities as more likely to be exploited.

The full list of vulnerabilities addressed this month is available in Microsoft’s Security Response Center.

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Microsoft’s monthly Patch Tuesday is first in 6 months with no actively exploited zero-days

Microsoft addressed 83 vulnerabilities that cut across its broad portfolio of enterprise software and underlying services in its latest security update. The company’s Patch Tuesday release contained no actively exploited zero-day vulnerabilities and six defects it described as more likely to be exploited. 

The vendor’s batch of patches marks the first monthly update without an actively exploited zero-day in six months.

The “lack of bugs under active attack is a nice change from last month,” when Microsoft reported six actively exploited vulnerabilities, Dustin Childs, head of threat awareness at Trend Micro’s Zero Day Initiative, said in a blog post Tuesday. 

Two vulnerabilities addressed this month — CVE-2026-21262 and CVE-2026-26127 — were listed as publicly known at the time of release. “These bugs are more bark than bite,” said Satnam Narang, senior staff research engineer at Tenable. 

More than half of the defects in this month’s update can trigger escalated privileges, and six of those vulnerabilities — CVE-2026-23668, CVE-2026-24289, CVE-2026-24291, CVE-2026-24294, CVE-2026-25187 and CVE-2026-26132 — were rated as more likely to be exploited, Narang added.

An information-disclosure defect in Microsoft Excel — CVE-2026-26144 — showcases an attack scenario that’s likely to occur more often, according to Childs. “An attacker could use it to cause the Copilot Agent to exfiltrate data off the target,” essentially making it a zero-click operation, he wrote.

Researchers also focused on a pair of defects in Microsoft Office with CVSS ratings of 8.4 — CVE-2026-26110 and CVE-2026-26113 — that attackers can trigger to execute arbitrary code. The preview plane in Microsoft Office can serve as the attack vector for both vulnerabilities.

“Remote-code execution vulnerabilities in Office applications pose significant risks for organizations, as documents are widely shared via email, file shares, and collaboration platforms,” Mike Walters, president and co-founder of Action1, said in an email. 

“If exploited, attackers could gain control of user systems, deploy ransomware, steal corporate data, or move laterally across internal networks,” he added. “Even a single malicious document could compromise an endpoint and give attackers a foothold inside the organization.”

The full list of vulnerabilities addressed this month is available in Microsoft’s Security Response Center.

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