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Microsoft Blames Caching Issue for Unexpected Windows Driver Updates
Microsoft fixed a misconfiguration in the Windows Update caching service that temporarily dropped device enrollment data, causing some Windows devices with auto-update restrictions to install driver updates without notice. The affected drivers were Microsoft-approved and posed no security risk. The issue reportedly affected tens of thousands of devices and could disrupt peripherals, but has been resolved with an updated service cache and enrollment status, and a review to prevent recurrence.

French and Spanish Authorities Dismantle Fake ID Marketplace Used by Migrant Smugglers
French and Spanish authorities have dismantled an online marketplace selling forged identity and administrative documents to migrant-smuggling networks across the European Union. In Alicante, on May 27, a suspect was arrested and document-production equipment along with about 800 counterfeit European IDs were seized from an apartment rented under a false name. The platform allegedly supplied forged documents to help smugglers evade border controls, fraudulently obtain residence rights, and move within the Schengen Area. Europol says document fraud underpins migrant smuggling, a concern reflected in the EU’s new European Centre Against Migrant Smuggling (ECAMS) and the 2025 EU Serious and Organised Crime Threat Assessment, which call for stronger intelligence sharing and cross-border investigations.

Chinese Hackers Use New Atlas RAT Malware in European Cyberattacks
TA4922, a Chinese-speaking cybercrime group, has expanded from East Asia into Europe, targeting Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom, and South Africa with the Atlas RAT and a broader set of loaders. The operation is financially motivated but shows potential for surveillance, delivering payloads via tailored phishing lures and messaging apps such as WhatsApp, LINE, and Teams. Atlas RAT provides capabilities including file theft, keylogging, screen and webcam recording, and stealth features, while RomulusLoader, SilentRunLoader, and Winos4.0 (ValleyRAT) enable further payloads and remote access. Proofpoint notes TA4922 conducts more unique campaigns than any other tracked actor, with high tempo and diverse objectives that could attract espionage groups.

New HTTP/2 Bomb DoS Attack Crashes Web Servers in Under a Minute
A new DoS technique dubbed HTTP/2 Bomb can crash major web servers in seconds from a single machine by combining HPACK header compression amplification with HTTP/2 flow-control stalling (Slowloris-style). Discovered with OpenAI's Codex under Calif researchers, it can exhaust tens of gigabytes of RAM within seconds on a 100 Mbps link; in tests, Envoy hit 32 GB in ~10 seconds, Apache httpd ~18 seconds, Nginx ~45 seconds, and IIS ~45 seconds (64 GB RAM). Patches exist for nginx (1.29.8, max_headers) and Apache httpd (mod_http2 2.0.41, CVE-2026-49975); patches for IIS, Envoy, and Pingora are not yet available. Mitigations include disabling HTTP/2 where feasible or placing a proxy/firewall that enforces hard header-count limits. PoC exploits are public, and full technical details will be disclosed at the Real World AI Security conference.