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Latest coverage for Mistake

Mistakes in security configuration, coding, or operations can expose systems, enable unauthorized access, and complicate incident response.

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Mistake is an unintentional human or operational error that weakens security or exposes information. In infosecurity reporting, it commonly includes misconfigured cloud storage or access controls, use of default or improperly protected credentials, accidental disclosure of sensitive data, and incorrect security or software changes. The term generally describes how a weakness was introduced, not a deliberate attack.

Its significance depends on what the error exposes and how long it remains undetected. A permissive firewall rule or publicly reachable administration interface can expand an attack surface; mishandled credentials can enable unauthorized access; and sending data to the wrong recipient can create a privacy incident. Useful safeguards include secure defaults, least-privilege access, peer review and approval for changes, automated configuration checks, and logging that helps detect and investigate errors. Reports under this tag may also indicate a need to correct the underlying process rather than only fix the immediate mistake.

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Showing 20 most recent headlines of 44
Bank Info Security 1 week, 2 days ago

Anthropic Sues Abnormal AI Over Alleged Brand Copying

Frontier AI Developer Says Enterprise Customers Could Mistake the Two BrandsAnthropic alleges Abnormal's 2025 rebrand unlawfully mirrors its visual identity as both companies increasingly compete for enterprise AI security customers, while Abnormal denies any likelihood of customer confusion and says its branding predates Anthropic's claims.

In cybersecurity, the line between a normal update and a serious incident keeps getting thinner. Systems that once felt reliable are now under pressure from constant change. New AI tools, connected devices, and automated systems quietly create more ways in, often faster than security teams can react. This week’s stories show how easily a small mistake or hidden service can turn into a real

AI Failures May Hide in Ways that Safety Tests Don't MeasureWhen an AI chatbot tells people to add glue to pizza, the error is obvious. When it recommends eating more bananas - sound nutritional advice that could be dangerous for someone with kidney failure - the mistake hides in plain sight.

Most people know the story of Paul Bunyan. A giant lumberjack, a trusted axe, and a challenge from a machine that promised to outpace him. Paul doubled down on his old way of working, swung harder, and still lost by a quarter inch. His mistake was not losing the contest. His mistake was assuming that effort alone could outmatch a new kind of tool

The Hacker News 8 months, 1 week ago

Enterprise Credentials at Risk – Same Old, Same Old?

Imagine this: Sarah from accounting gets what looks like a routine password reset email from your organization’s cloud provider. She clicks the link, types in her credentials, and goes back to her spreadsheet. But unknown to her, she’s just made a big mistake. Sarah just accidentally handed over her login details to cybercriminals who are laughing all the way to their dark web

In cybersecurity, precision matters—and there’s little room for error. A small mistake, missed setting, or quiet misconfiguration can quickly lead to much bigger problems. The signs we’re seeing this week highlight deeper issues behind what might look like routine incidents: outdated tools, slow response to risks, and the ongoing gap between compliance and real security

Emeraldwhale gang looked sharp – until it made a common S3 bucket mistake A criminal operation dubbed Emeraldwhale has been discovered after it dumped more than 15,000 credentials belonging to cloud service and email providers in an open AWS S3 bucket, according to security researchers.…

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