Nissan Under Data Breach Due to Oracle Zero-Day Attacks
Nissan Under Data Breach Due to Oracle Zero-Day Attacks
Nissan is warning that it suffered a data breach affecting current and former employees after threat actors exploited an Oracle PeopleSoft vulnerability in data theft attacks previously linked to the ShinyHunters extortion group. Nissan believes attackers accessed personal information that may include employee contact information, banking information, Social Security numbers, Social Insurance Numbers, National Identification Numbers, financial and tax information, and dependent and beneficiary information.
Source: Bleeping Computer
NAIC Confirms Data Breach From Zero-Day Vulnerability in Oracle
The NAIC confirmed a data breach stemming from a zero-day vulnerability in Oracle PeopleSoft. Detected on June 11, 2026, the attacker accessed public financial reporting and credit rating agency data, causing a temporary pause in investment designations. Crucially, personal information and financial account details were not compromised. The NAIC has contained the breach, engaged the FBI alongside outside experts, and almost fully restored normal operations.
Source: Infosecurity Magazine
KDDI Data Breach Imoacts up to 14.2 M
KDDI Corporation, one of Japan’s largest telecommunications companies, disclosed a data breach that exposed up to 14.2 million email accounts across six Japanese internet service providers. The company detected the intrusion on June 17, which was caused by a vulnerability in third-party software used by its email system. The company said that email addresses and passwords may have been exposed.
Source: Security Affairs
Over 300 UK Firms Impacted by Ransomware in a Year
UK organizations suffered more than 26 successful ransomware attacks each month last year, with SMEs hit hardest. The UK’s cybercrime and fraud reporting service was contacted by 323 corporate ransomware victims between April 2025 and March 2026, according to City of London Police. Over 50% of reports were from small and mid-sized companies. Experts urged corporate victims not to pay their extorters as the attackers will rarely return data in full and decryption keys don’t always work.
Source: Infosecurity Magazine
OpenAI and Anthropic Opens New Models Only to Trump-Approved Customers
OpenAI said Friday it is restricting the release of its new artificial intelligence model at the request of Trump’s administration. Anthropic announced hours later that the Trump administration has approved a limited release of its strongest cybersecurity model, two weeks after the Commerce Department effectively banned it. Both companies said their newest models would be available to small groups of trusted partners.
Source: Security Week
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