Promote your product or open-source project on TechLogHub
Sponsored placements are available across TechLogHub. Open the pricing dialog to see plan details in USD.
Products
Discover amazing products built by our community
Open Source ProjectsNEW
Curating the best open-source projects shaping the future
Latest from the Blog
Analysis, product insight, and practical reads for builders

European Gym giant Basic-Fit data breach affects 1 million members
Basic-Fit, Europe’s largest gym chain, disclosed a data breach affecting about 1 million members across the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, France, Spain, and Germany. Exposed information includes full names, addresses, emails, phone numbers, dates of birth, bank account details, and other membership data, though no IDs or passwords were accessed; franchise data was not affected. The incident was detected by monitoring systems and stopped within minutes, with an external security-led investigation underway. EU data-retention rules apply: personal data should be deleted after two years, and data in the My Basic-Fit app is accessible for one year post-termination and removed two months after uninstall.

Stolen Rockstar Games analytics data leaked by extortion gang
Rockstar Games confirms a data breach linked to an Anodot security incident, with the ShinyHunters extortion group leaking 78.6 million records said to come from Rockstar’s Snowflake analytics environment; the data reportedly includes internal analytics on online services, in-game revenue and player behavior for GTA Online and Red Dead Online, plus Zendesk support metrics, while Rockstar says the access was limited and the breach has no impact on players or the organization.

Critical flaw in wolfSSL library enables forged certificate use
Researchers disclosed a critical vulnerability in the wolfSSL SSL/TLS library (CVE-2026-5194) that allows forged certificates by weakening digest size checks during signature verification. The flaw affects several algorithms (ECDSA/ECC, DSA, ML-DSA, Ed25519, Ed448) and could let attackers impersonate trusted servers or data. wolfSSL fixed it in version 5.9.1, released April 8, 2026; organizations using wolfSSL should upgrade promptly, especially those with ECC and EdDSA/ML-DSA enabled. Some downstream vendors may have different advisories; Red Hat notes MariaDB is not affected because it uses OpenSSL. This highlights the importance of comprehensive validation across multiple surfaces and timely patching.

Adobe rolls out emergency fix for Acrobat, Reader zero-day flaw
Adobe has issued an emergency update for Acrobat/Reader to fix CVE-2026-34621, a zero-day that bypasses sandboxing and can execute arbitrary code via malicious PDFs, with exploits observed since December; affected products include Acrobat DC, Reader DC, and Acrobat 2024 on Windows and macOS, and users should update through Help > Check for Updates or download from Adobe’s portal, as there are no listed workarounds. The flaw was discovered by Haifei Li, and attacks have involved Russian-language oil-and-gas themed PDFs; the severity was downgraded once the vector was deemed local.