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Latest coverage for Bypass

Stay updated on the latest bypass techniques threatening information security. Discover defenses and trends in system vulnerabilities with our insights.

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Background for this topic.

Bypass describes attacker methods that circumvent specific security controls, such as authentication checks, input validation, or detection systems, without directly exploiting the underlying vulnerability. These techniques often leverage design flaws, misconfigurations, or protocol weaknesses to evade protections like firewalls, multi-factor authentication, or antivirus scanning.

Bypassing controls can enable unauthorized access, data exfiltration, or persistent presence while avoiding alerts, complicating detection and response. Effective defense requires layered security measures, rigorous configuration management, and continuous validation of control effectiveness to identify and close bypass paths before attackers exploit them.

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The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) on Wednesday added three security flaws, each impacting AMI MegaRAC, D-Link DIR-859 router, and Fortinet FortiOS, to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog, based on evidence of active exploitation

Researcher Details Stealthy Multi-Turn Prompt Exploit Bypassing AI SafetyWell-timed nudges are enough to derail a large language model and use it for nefarious purposes, researchers have found. Dubbed "Echo Chamber," the exploit uses a chain of subtle prompts to bypass existing safety guardrails by manipulating the model's emotional tone and contextual assumptions.

Not every risk looks like an attack. Some problems start as small glitches, strange logs, or quiet delays that don’t seem urgent—until they are. What if your environment is already being tested, just not in ways you expected? Some of the most dangerous moves are hidden in plain sight. It’s worth asking: what patterns are we missing, and what signals are we ignoring because they don’t match old