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Latest coverage for Misconfiguration

Misconfiguration exposes assets through unsafe settings, enabling unauthorized access or data loss; secure baselines, reviews, and least privilege reduce risk.

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Misconfiguration is an insecure or unintended setting in a system, application, network, cloud resource, or identity control. Examples include publicly accessible storage, default credentials, overly broad permissions, exposed management interfaces, unnecessary services, and weak encryption settings. Attackers can discover these conditions through scanning or by abusing access they already possess; depending on the asset and data involved, the result may be unauthorized access, data exposure, or expanded control of connected systems.

The main defense is to define and enforce secure configuration baselines: disable unused features, remove default accounts and secrets, restrict network exposure, apply least privilege, and protect sensitive data with appropriate access controls and encryption. Review configurations before deployment and monitor for drift afterward, including in infrastructure managed as code. Prioritize findings by internet exposure, privilege, data sensitivity, and exploitability, then verify that remediation actually restored the intended state.

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Microsoft Security Research 4 days, 15 hours ago

Defending SaaS-based applications against ShinyHunters OAuth abuse

Microsoft Threat Intelligence identified threat actor activity with overlapping tradecraft commonly associated with ShinyHunters, including voice phishing (vishing), supply-chain compromise, and misconfigured guest access targeting SaaS-based applications. The post Defending SaaS-based applications against ShinyHunters OAuth abuse appeared first on Microsoft Security Blog.

Exposed UIs, weak authentication, and risky defaults could turn cloud-native AI apps on Kubernetes into potential targets by threat actors. Learn how exploitable misconfigurations lead to RCE and data leaks. The post When configuration becomes a vulnerability: Exploitable misconfigurations in AI apps appeared first on Microsoft Security Blog.