• Drone boat makers say they’re ready for the U.S. Navy to start testing their wares.

    “I don't think anyone questions whether unmanned has a place in the fleet architecture,” Blue Water Autonomy CEO Rylan Hamilton told Defense One. “It's really: ‘How long is it going to take to get some of these vessels out into the fleet and operating, so the end user of the fleet can really figure out how they want to use them and how many they actually want?’” 

    Speaking ahead of this week’s WEST conference in San Diego, Hamilton said his two-year-old company has been intensively testing its first product, an 800-ton, nearly-200-foot autonomous surface vessel. He said the craft, dubbed Liberty Class, has endured more than a thousand hours at sea since the new year.

    “We've been able to raise private capital from firms like Google Ventures, and we've used that to basically test everything on the ocean seven days a week,” he said. “We know we're not going to be perfect out of the gate. And so it's been really important for us to take everything we develop and just test it and take it through as many cycles as possible before we actually put it on a production ship.” 

    Blue Water aims to put the Liberty into production later this year at Conrad Shipyard in Louisiana. Hamilton wouldn’t say how many would be built, but said the shipyard can produce more than 20 similarly sized vessels a year.

    “Right now, the focus really should be on the suppliers and not the Navy. I think the Navy's given all the right signals. They've given all the right contract mechanisms to allow industry to move fast. And now what I think the Navy and the end user needs is to see the performance of these vessels,” Hamilton said. “They need to see that they actually meet the requirements and they actually serve the end user and the fleet in terms of being reliable.”  

    Welcome

    You’ve reached the Defense Business Brief, where we dig into what the Pentagon buys, who they’re buying from, and why. Send along your tips, feedback, and rooftop recommendations to lwilliams@defenseone.com. Check out the Defense Business Brief archive here, and tell your friends and foes to subscribe!

    CNO looks at robots, AI, and additive manufacturing in fighting instructions released ahead of his keynote opening speech Tuesday at the WEST conference in San Diego. 

    Robotic and autonomous systems “are an important feature of the current and future force. Yet by treating these systems as novel, we carve them out of the standard model and reduce options and fungibility in fielding them at scale,” Caudle writes in the document. “The Navy must clarify how Fleet Commanders and the Joint Force can express demands for RAS capabilities and effects” and “address the associated doctrinal shortfalls, organizational seams, and process gaps, including determining how we will allocate RAS in service decisions like strategic laydown, dispersal, and global force management.”

    But the chief of naval operations isn’t quite ready to pen a standalone unmanned or robotic systems strategy, he told attendees Tuesday during Q&A following his WEST speech.

    “I'm not ready to do that yet. We're in this discovery phase of how we…assemble command and control of these forces through the administrative chain command, so we can actually field to maintain, sustain and train sailors to actually bring these kinds of capabilities to bear,” he said.

    However, Caudle said he could easily see robotics and autonomous systems, or RAS, commanders as part of a carrier strike group’s staff, alongside those for air missile defense and information warfare, “to advise that strike group commander.”

    The Navy has already experimented and employed autonomous systems with Task Force 59, Fourth Fleet, and Naval Forces Europe, he said. But “I need to understand this a little bit more…before I go pen the paper on how it's going to look in the future.”

    Caudle also spotlighted advanced manufacturing during his keynote.

    “I just had this opportunity at [Naval Station Rota] to see this incredible demonstration of advanced manufacturing there on specific components—large-scale, metal components—that the Arleigh Burkes there in Rota need,” he said. “I did not know to the extent that that capability exists at that level. So those are the types of things I want to scale” to help speed up maintenance.

    Arms exports. The Pentagon has made good on one of its acquisition reform goals: moving the Defense Security Cooperation Agency and Defense Technology Security Administration from its policy shop to its acquisition shop, defense officials announced on social media Tuesday. 

    “This realignment has created a single, coherent defense-sales enterprise within the department,” Michael Duffey, the Pentagon’s chief weapons buyer, said in a video posted on X. “We’ll proactively target sales that unlock foreign investment to help power critical production lines, fueling companies to invest in new manufacturing plants, hire more engineers and create thousands of well-paying American jobs, all while better equipping our partners to share the burden of their own conventional defense.”

    On Feb. 6, President Trump ordered the Pentagon to prioritize foreign arms sales to countries that have increased their defense spending and focus on certain domestic-made weapons. 

    ICYMI: The Pentagon is definitely reviewing defense contractors’ performance, as promised in an earlier executive order, but is stopping short of naming which ones are under review. 

    What I’m curious about: Will these reviews result in any actual change for contractors, how long will they last, and will they steer future contract awards. TBD for now.

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  • The U.S. military is taking control of more Texas land, citing “security operations along the U.S. southern border,” Defense One’s Thomas Novelly reported Tuesday. The seizure has raised questions among experts who note that border crossings have already plummeted and that charges stemming from the militarization of federal lands have been thrown out by judges.

    What’s new: Nearly 200 more miles of the U.S. border with Mexico have been placed under Air Force supervision, enabling wider use of military force and heftier charges against people crossing illegally into the country, Novelly writes. Air Force leaders announced the changes Friday, militarizing two new swaths of land along the Rio Grande. One adds about 40 miles to the existing NDA 3, extending the zone upriver to Roma, Texas. The other is a 150-mile stretch from Falcon Dam to Del Rio that has been dubbed NDA 6. (Novelly’s article has a map.)

    Background: Last June, Pentagon leaders announced that they would take charge of land along the final 250 miles of the Rio Grande, which had been administered by State Department employees on the International Boundary and Water Commission. Designated National Defense Area 3, the land was placed under the control of Joint Base San Antonio, which is operated by the Air Force. As with similar zones established last year, the NDA designation effectively turned the land into a military base that can be patrolled by troops. As well, trespassers are subject to misdemeanor charges related to illegally entering Defense Department property. 

    Panning out: Since April, the Trump administration has militarized border lands in Arizona, California, New Mexico, and Texas as extensions of Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps bases. By July, they covered roughly one-third of the U.S.-Mexico border. 

    “If you believe the administration's line that there's basically no more illegal immigration, it seems that the step is probably unnecessary,” said Jennifer Kavanagh, a senior fellow and director of military analysis at the Defense Priorities think tank. “I can't really see a rationale for doing it,” she added. Continue reading, here.


    Welcome to this Wednesday edition of The D Brief, a newsletter focused on developments affecting the future of U.S. national security, brought to you by Ben Watson with Bradley Peniston. It’s more important than ever to stay informed, so we’d like to take a moment to thank you for reading. Share your tips and feedback here. And if you’re not already subscribed, you can do that here. On this day in 1977, newly-elected Jimmy Carter became the first president to fly aboard the Boeing-made National Emergency Airborne Command Post—an E-4A aircraft, which has since been updated to an E-4B and is called the National Airborne Operations Center, or NAOC. (Hat tip today to Stephen Schwartz.)

    Deportation nation

    National security update: Less than 14% of those arrested by federal immigration agents had violent criminal records, CBS News reported off data spanning Trump’s first year back in the White House. 

    Why it matters: “Trump and his aides often talk about immigration officials targeting murderers, rapists and gangsters, [but] the internal data indicate that less than 2% of those arrested by [Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents] over the past year had homicide or sexual assault charges or convictions,” CBS reports. “Another 2% of those taken into ICE custody were accused of being gang members.” Meanwhile, a CBS survey last month “found that Americans' support for Mr. Trump's deportation efforts had fallen to 46%, down from 59% at the start of his second term.” 

    Another new survey found a 15-point rise in Americans who “strongly disapprove” of Trump’s handling of border security and immigration, NBC News reported Wednesday. In June 51% approved versus 49% who disapproved. But by the start of February, those numbers had flipped to 40% approving versus 60% disapproving. 

    Almost 75% of those surveyed also said they think ICE should be reformed or abolished. NBC’s online survey gathered results from nearly 22,000 Americans from Jan. 27 to Feb. 6. 

    By the way: A 14-year-old American in Idaho was zip-tied while watching her 6- and 8-year-old siblings during an immigration raid at a community horse racing event in the town of Wilder, about an hour from Boise, CBS News reported Tuesday. “On Tuesday, the American Civil Liberties Union filed a federal civil rights lawsuit highlighting the mistreatment of families attending the weekend recreation event at La Catedral Arena, many of whom were American citizens of Hispanic descent.”

    A judge just dismissed with prejudice federal charges against an American who had been jailed for six months following a Los Angeles protest in August. The U.S. citizen was accused of assaulting a federal officer with a cloth hat during the protest, but in her dismissal Monday, the “judge noted discrepancies in officers’ statements,” including allegations the citizen hit the officers—which was not supported by video evidence of the encounter, the Guardian reports

    • In still more video footage contradicting federal officials’ account of a violent encounter with an American, the Chicago Sun-Times on Wednesday shared just-released video from Border Patrol agent Charles Exum during an incident in Chicago when he shot school teacher Marimar Martinez five times in October. “Martinez is expected to announce a new lawsuit stemming from her Oct. 4 shooting by a Border Patrol agent at a press conference Wednesday. Her attorneys say newly released evidence will show an agent lied to the FBI about firing five shots into her front windshield,” the newspaper reports. 

    ICE’s five-stage “detention pipeline” for Americans that runs from Minnesota to Texas is documented by Just Security’s Ryan Goodman and Sophia Khoroushi, who dug through court records for a special report published Wednesday. “U.S. citizens have been caught up in all five stages, as have individuals who are legal residents and others with pending legal status,” Goodman and Khoroushi write. “Indeed, of the three exits out of the pipeline, many have been released pursuant to a court order finding the government unlawfully detained them.” 

    Update: ICE has spent more than a half billion dollars to buy warehouses to concentrate migrants in detention, including in locations across Maryland, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Texas and Georgia. “If these mega-camps are utilized to the full capacity ICE intends, they'll be the largest prisons in the country, with little real oversight,” warned Aaron Reichlin-Melnick of the American Immigration Council. 

    For some perspective, “Right now Rikers Island, the physically largest jail in the entire United States, is holding under 7,000 people,” he writes. “ICE's warehouse plans include detention camps which will hold between 8,500-10,000 people in buildings not designed for human habitation.”

    Those warehouses are becoming a “symbol of resistance,” the New York Times reported Sunday. Similar to the CBS and NBC polls noted above, the Times cited their own recent survey to note that “A broad majority of voters—63 percent—disapprove of the way ICE is handling its job,” while “Sixty-one percent of voters said that ICE had ‘gone too far,’ including nearly one in five Republicans.”

    That resistance is even reaching Republican-dominated regions like Byhalia, Mississippi, as GOP Sen. Roger Wicker noted last week, according to the Mississippi Free Press. “From my understanding, the ICE detention facility would have a capacity exceeding 8,500 beds,” Wicker wrote in a Facebook post on Friday. “Existing medical and human services infrastructure in Byhalia is insufficient to support such a large detainee population. Establishing a detention center at this site would place significant strain on local resources.” 

    But ICE is “expanding across the U.S. at breakneck speed,” WIRED reported Tuesday, documenting what it calls “a secret, monthslong expansion campaign.”

    “Documents show that more than 150 leases and office expansions have or would place new facilities in nearly every state, many of them in or just outside of the country’s largest metropolitan areas,” WIRED’s Leah Fieger writes. “In many cases, these facilities, which are to be used by street-level agents and ICE attorneys, are located near elementary schools, medical offices, places of worship, and other sensitive locations.” 

    DHS is also asking officials to hide lease listings due to “national security concerns,” according to emails and memos with the General Services Administration. It’s also been bypassing legislation “that requires open competition among bidders for federal building and lease procurements.” Read more, here

    On Capitol Hill, a stalemate over ICE reform is threatening to shut down DHS by midnight on Friday, the Times reported Tuesday. The latest sticking points include “unmasking those engaged in the immigration roundups and new requirements for warrants for searches and arrests.” 

    And speaking of Capitol Hill, a grand jury on Tuesday refused to indict six Democratic lawmakers over their video encouraging U.S. troops to disobey “illegal orders” in the wake of the military’s airstrike campaign to kill people aboard alleged drug-trafficking boats in the waters around Latin America. More than three-dozen of those strikes have killed at least 130 people to date, according to the Defense Department. NBC News called the indictment “the latest example of the Justice Department’s targeting the president's perceived political opponents” in a case led by “political appointees, not career Justice Department prosecutors.” 

    “Today wasn’t just an embarrassing day for the Administration. It was another sad day for our country,” said one of those lawmakers, former Pentagon official Elissa Slotkin, a Democratic senator from Michigan, writing on social media after the grand jury’s decision. “Trump continues to weaponize our justice system against his perceived enemies. It’s the kind of thing you see in a foreign country, not in the United States we know and love.”

    To amplify its social media output, DHS just hired a 21-year-old who was known to post white-supremacist messages while working at the Labor Department, the New York Times reported Wednesday. His name is Peyton Rollins, and he’s authored dozens of posts using imagery and fonts “reminiscent of the 1920s and 1930s,” including the Fraktur font, which “had been used in early Nazi government documents and on the original cover of Hitler’s book, ‘Mein Kampf,’” the Times reports. 

    While at the Department of Labor, he also posted nearly 20 times using “phrases associated with QAnon, an internet conspiracy theory,” in addition to “violent language and a recurrent antisemitic trope” on the government’s social media account. 

    Additional reading: 

    Around the Defense Department

    Every soldier is a drone operator. That’s the watchword at Fort Stewart, Georgia, where the 3rd Infantry Division is working on a pair of courses to certify troops to operate small unmanned aerial systems. “The legacy UAS systems were focused on dedicated 15-series UAS operators, whereas now, we're leaning more toward training standard infantry and armor soldiers to be the UAS operators,”said Capt. Brenden Shutt, the division’s innovation officer. It’s part of a servicewide effort to create doctrine around using drones throughout every formation. Defense One’s Meghann Myers has more, here.

    Air Force hones its hub-and-spoke approach to basing. Today’s USAF leaders aren’t axing quite all of the previous administration’s efforts to prepare for a possible fight with China. For example, they’re are continuing to implement Agile Combat Employment, the service’s undersecretary said last week. “We cannot just project force and operate out of our main operating bases,” Matthew Lohmeier told a small group of reporters here as he wrapped up a trip around the Pacific. Defense One’s Jennifer Hlad reports from Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, here.

    FAA announced a 10-day halt to El Paso flights—then lifted it with conflicting explanations. At 11:30 p.m. on Tuesday, the Federal Aviation Administration shut down all flights to the West Texas city, surprising state and local officials, the New York Times reported

    But the halt was lifted Wednesday morning before an aviation official told Politico the Defense Department had been testing counter-drone technology “without sharing critical safety information” with the Federal Aviation Administration. Those tests originated from the Biggs Army Airfield at Fort Bliss, CNN reported

    But Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said an unspecified “cartel drone incursion” caused the closure. “The threat has been neutralized, and there is no danger to commercial travel in the region,” Duffy wrote on social media. 

    More reading:

    Lastly today:Inside a Military Bootcamp With Green Berets Training for Arctic Warfare,” a first-person video narrative by a Wall Street Journal reporter who jumped into freezing waters along with the operators.

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  • For the past week, the massive “Internet of Things” (IoT) botnet known as Kimwolf has been disrupting The Invisible Internet Project (I2P), a decentralized, encrypted communications network designed to anonymize and secure online communications. I2P users started reporting disruptions in the network around the same time the Kimwolf botmasters began relying on it to evade takedown attempts against the botnet’s control servers.

    Kimwolf is a botnet that surfaced in late 2025 and quickly infected millions of systems, turning poorly secured IoT devices like TV streaming boxes, digital picture frames and routers into relays for malicious traffic and abnormally large distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks.

    I2P is a decentralized, privacy-focused network that allows people to communicate and share information anonymously.

    “It works by routing data through multiple encrypted layers across volunteer-operated nodes, hiding both the sender’s and receiver’s locations,” the I2P website explains. “The result is a secure, censorship-resistant network designed for private websites, messaging, and data sharing.”

    On February 3, I2P users began complaining on the organization’s GitHub page about tens of thousands of routers suddenly overwhelming the network, preventing existing users from communicating with legitimate nodes. Users reported a rapidly increasing number of new routers joining the network that were unable to transmit data, and that the mass influx of new systems had overwhelmed the network to the point where users could no longer connect.

    I2P users complaining about service disruptions from a rapidly increasing number of routers suddenly swamping the network.

    When one I2P user asked whether the network was under attack, another user replied, “Looks like it. My physical router freezes when the number of connections exceeds 60,000.”

    A graph shared by I2P developers showing a marked drop in successful connections on the I2P network around the time the Kimwolf botnet started trying to use the network for fallback communications.

    The same day that I2P users began noticing the outages, the individuals in control of Kimwolf posted to their Discord channel that they had accidentally disrupted I2P after attempting to join 700,000 Kimwolf-infected bots as nodes on the network.

    The Kimwolf botmaster openly discusses what they are doing with the botnet in a Discord channel with my name on it.

    Although Kimwolf is known as a potent weapon for launching DDoS attacks, the outages caused this week by some portion of the botnet attempting to join I2P are what’s known as a “Sybil attack,” a threat in peer-to-peer networks where a single entity can disrupt the system by creating, controlling, and operating a large number of fake, pseudonymous identities.

    Indeed, the number of Kimwolf-infected routers that tried to join I2P this past week was many times the network’s normal size. I2P’s Wikipedia page says the network consists of roughly 55,000 computers distributed throughout the world, with each participant acting as both a router (to relay traffic) and a client.

    However, Lance James, founder of the New York City based cybersecurity consultancy Unit 221B and the original founder of I2P, told KrebsOnSecurity the entire I2P network now consists of between 15,000 and 20,000 devices on any given day.

    An I2P user posted this graph on Feb. 10, showing tens of thousands of routers — mostly from the United States — suddenly attempting to join the network.

    Benjamin Brundage is founder of Synthient, a startup that tracks proxy services and was the first to document Kimwolf’s unique spreading techniques. Brundage said the Kimwolf operator(s) have been trying to build a command and control network that can’t easily be taken down by security companies and network operators that are working together to combat the spread of the botnet.

    Brundage said the people in control of Kimwolf have been experimenting with using I2P and a similar anonymity network — Tor — as a backup command and control network, although there have been no reports of widespread disruptions in the Tor network recently.

    “I don’t think their goal is to take I2P down,” he said. “It’s more they’re looking for an alternative to keep the botnet stable in the face of takedown attempts.”

    The Kimwolf botnet created challenges for Cloudflare late last year when it began instructing millions of infected devices to use Cloudflare’s domain name system (DNS) settings, causing control domains associated with Kimwolf to repeatedly usurp AmazonAppleGoogle and Microsoft in Cloudflare’s public ranking of the most frequently requested websites.

    James said the I2P network is still operating at about half of its normal capacity, and that a new release is rolling out which should bring some stability improvements over the next week for users.

    Meanwhile, Brundage said the good news is Kimwolf’s overlords appear to have quite recently alienated some of their more competent developers and operators, leading to a rookie mistake this past week that caused the botnet’s overall numbers to drop by more than 600,000 infected systems.

    “It seems like they’re just testing stuff, like running experiments in production,” he said. “But the botnet’s numbers are dropping significantly now, and they don’t seem to know what they’re doing.”

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  • Indian defense sector and government-aligned organizations have been targeted by multiple campaigns that are designed to compromise Windows and Linux environments with remote access trojans capable of stealing sensitive data and ensuring continued access to infected machines. The campaigns are characterized by the use of malware families like Geta RAT, Ares RAT, and DeskRAT, which are often

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  • New York, NY, February 11th, 2026, CyberNewswire Insight Partners leads round, alongside Quadrille Capital, to accelerate expansion across Americas, EMEA, and strategic verticals GitGuardian, a leading secrets and Non-Human Identity (NHI) security platform and #1 app on GitHub Marketplace, today announced a $50 million Series C funding round led by global software investor Insight Partners, […]

    The post GitGuardian Raises $50M Series C to Address Non-Human Identities Crisis and AI Agent Security Gap appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.

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  • This week in cybersecurity from the editors at Cybercrime Magazine

    Sausalito, Calif. – Feb. 11, 2026

    Read the full story in ZDNet

    ZDNet recently published “10 ways AI can inflict unprecedented damage in 2026,” that deserve every business leader’s attention:

    1. AI-enabled malware will unleash havoc

    2. Agentic AI is evolving into every threat actor’s fantasy

    3. Prompt injection: AI tools will be the new attack surface

    4. Threat actors will use AI to go after the weakest link – humans

    5. AI will expose APIs as a too-easily-exploited point of attack

    6. Extortion tactics will evolve from ransomware encryption

    7. How the contagion spreads to industrial control and operations

    8. Imposter employees: The insider threat to your organization

    9. Nation-states will destabilize Western interests

    10. Credential mismanagement to continue as a leading cybersecurity challenge

    Even though ransomware encryption is not at the top of its rankings, ZDNET emphasizes that Cybersecurity Ventures predicts the global total cost of ransomware damage to increase by 30 percent, from $57 billion in 2025 to $74 billion in 2026.

    For some organizations, ZDNet says, ransomware isn’t just a threat to the bottom line; it’s a threat to the business’s survival.

    Read the Full Story



    Cybercrime Magazine is Page ONE for Cybersecurity. Go to any of our sections to read the latest:

    • SCAM. The latest schemes, frauds, and social engineering attacks being launched on consumers globally.
    • NEWS. Breaking coverage on cyberattacks and data breaches, and the most recent privacy and security stories.
    • HACK. Another organization gets hacked every day. We tell you who, what, where, when, and why.
    • VC. Cybersecurity venture capital deal flow with the latest investment activity from various sources around the world.
    • M&A. Cybersecurity mergers and acquisitions including big tech, pure cyber, product vendors and professional services.
    • BLOG. What’s happening at Cybercrime Magazine. Plus the stories that don’t make headlines (but maybe they should).
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    Contact us to send story tips, feedback and suggestions, and for sponsorship opportunities and custom media productions.

    The post Ransomware Remains A Top 10 AI Threat In 2026 appeared first on Cybercrime Magazine.

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  • It’s Patch Tuesday, which means a number of software vendors have released patches for various security vulnerabilities impacting their products and services. Microsoft issued fixes for 59 flaws, including six actively exploited zero-days in various Windows components that could be abused to bypass security features, escalate privileges, and trigger a denial-of-service (DoS) condition. Elsewhere

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  • New York, NY, 11th February 2026, CyberNewswire

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  • Microsoft released its latest security update, KB5075912, for Windows 10 on February 10, 2026, providing critical protections for users enrolled in the Extended Security Updates (ESU) program. This update addresses urgent security vulnerabilities and system issues. At the same time, Windows 10 users transition to Windows 11 following the operating system’s end of support on […]

    The post Microsoft Launches Extended Security Update Program for Windows 10 Users appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.

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  • Microsoft has disclosed a new zero-day vulnerability in the MSHTML Framework that allows attackers to bypass security features, posing significant risks to organizations worldwide. Tracked as CVE-2026-21513, this vulnerability was released on February 10, 2026, and has already been exploited in the wild. The MSHTML Framework, a core Windows component used for rendering web content, […]

    The post MSHTML Framework Zero-Day Opens Door to Network-Based Security Bypass appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.

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