Daily Tech News: February 21, 2026

Tech News Header

CISA Slaps Two Roundcube Bombshells on KEV List – Hackers Already Pouncing

Hey devs, CISA just dropped two nasty Roundcube webmail flaws into its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog because attackers are actively hammering them. The big one, a 9.9 CVSS remote code execution bug, got weaponized in under 48 hours after disclosure – talk about fast fashion for exploits.

The Gory Details

We’re talking CVE-2025-49113, a deserialization flaw in the upload.php file that lets authenticated users run arbitrary code via a dodgy _from parameter. It was lurking in the codebase for over 10 years, fixed in Roundcube 1.5.10 and 1.6.11 back in June 2025. Dubai’s FearsOff crew spotted it, and boom – exploits hit the black market by June 4.

Then there’s CVE-2025-68461, a 7.2 CVSS XSS via sneaky SVG animate tags, patched in 1.5.12 and 1.6.12 last December. Roundcube powers tons of setups like cPanel, Plesk, and more – researchers say it hit over 53 million hosts at discovery. Nation-states like APT28 and Winter Vivern have abused similar holes before for credential theft and spying. Feds have until March 13, 2026, to patch, but everyone’s urged to move now.

Why Devs Should Sweat This

If you’re running Roundcube anywhere – email servers, hosting panels, you name it – this is your wake-up call. Default installs are sitting ducks, and with exploits flying, one missed patch means RCE city. Web devs, check your stacks; these aren’t theoretical – they’re live fire. Prioritize patching over that new feature; unpatched email is a hacker’s VIP lounge.

Final Take

Roundcube’s a staple, but this proves even old code hides killers. Update yesterday, scan your logs, and maybe audit those uploads. Stay sharp out there – cyber’s a battlefield, not a playground.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>

Penetration Testing Services (Ethical Hacking)

Social Media

Most Popular

Tech News
mzeeshanzafar28@gmail.com

Daily Tech News: June 29, 2026

Microsoft’s ‘Recall’ Feature: A Privacy Nightmare or a Game Changer? Microsoft’s new AI-powered “Recall” feature for Copilot+ PCs has ignited a firestorm of debate, becoming

Read More »
Tech News
mzeeshanzafar28@gmail.com

Daily Tech News: June 28, 2026

Browser Zero-Day: Your Internet Just Got a Little Less Safe (Again) Heads up, folks! A critical zero-day vulnerability has been discovered in a major web browser, actively exploited in the wild. This isn’t just a “patch when you get around

Read More »
Tech News
mzeeshanzafar28@gmail.com

Daily Tech News: June 27, 2026

Microsoft’s Patch Tuesday Drops a Bombshell: SharePoint Zero-Day Under Active Attack! The Big Picture: Microsoft just released its June 2024 Patch Tuesday, and it’s a critical one for enterprises globally. Among the 51 vulnerabilities patched, a significant zero-day in SharePoint

Read More »
Tech News
mzeeshanzafar28@gmail.com

Daily Tech News: June 26, 2026

Patch Tuesday Drops a Bomb: Critical MSMQ RCE Demands Immediate Attention! Microsoft’s June Patch Tuesday just landed, and it’s packing a punch with a critical remote code execution vulnerability in Microsoft Message Queuing (MSMQ). This isn’t just another patch; it’s

Read More »
Get The LatestProject Details

See our Demo work ...

By Simply Clicking on click below:

Demo Work

On Key

Related Posts

Daily Tech News: June 15, 2026

Exchange Under Attack: Critical RCE Actively Exploited – Patch NOW! Heads up, everyone running Microsoft Exchange! A critical remote code execution vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2024-21410, is being actively exploited in

Read More »

Daily Tech News: June 14, 2026

Patch Tuesday Panic: Microsoft Plugs 67 Holes, 3 Zero-Days Exposed! Microsoft just rolled out its May 2024 Patch Tuesday updates, addressing a staggering 67 vulnerabilities across its product line. This

Read More »