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Owen Flowers, 18, and Thalha Jubair, 20, were each sentenced to five and a half years at Woolwich Crown Court on Thursday, 16 July 2026, for the 2024 hack of Transport for London. The attack left 148 TfL systems inoperable and forced all 27,000 of the transport authority’s employees into an office to get their passwords reset in person. Both the NCA and the CPS put TfL’s losses and recovery
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LONDON—Ukraine is making a thousand times more drones now than when Russia invaded four years ago—and NATO must learn how, the alliance’s deputy military commander said Thursday.
“In 2022, Ukraine produced 5,000 drones, various. In 2026, they will produce, and I'm afraid I can't give the figure, but let's just say it is going to be well north of 5 million, of all flavors,” Air Chief Marshal Johnny Stringer told attendees at the Global Air and Space Chiefs Conference “So, for NATO nations, if 32 nations can't kind of meet those figures, then frankly, what do we do?”
The U.S. war on Iran has shown how quickly a conflict can consume arsenals of costly, exquisite weapons, Stringer said.
“Op Epic Fury has obviously had an impact on munitions as well, so assumptions that we may have had even months, not even a year ago, about what would be available when are now, in a sense, a little bit moot,” he said.
“These things cost a fortune,” he added. “You have to have them, but there's a bunch of other things you can get in far greater numbers with a little bit more imagination.”
The U.S. military has heavily depleted its critical munition stockpiles during the Iran war. Coalition forces fired over 11,000 munitions in the first 16 days of the conflict, at a cost of about $26 billion, according to a report by the Royal United Services Institute think tank.
The leader of the Royal Air Force struck similar notes in his own speech.
Air Chief Marshal Harv Smyth praised the “overwhelmingly lethality” of the U.S. and allied use of airpower during Epic Fury, but he also pointed out problems with the operation.
“The Iran conflict has also exposed the opposite side to that point: the saturation and sheer weight of modern retaliatory attacks. Air forces had to intercept a torrent of hundreds of ballistic missiles and thousands of attack drones,” Smyth said. “More Patriots were fired in the first few days of this campaign than during the last four and a half years in Ukraine. This is a sobering reminder of the importance of magazine depth, even in a short form.”
The U.S. war also ate into fleets of exquisite aircraft. At least 42 aircraft have been destroyed or damaged, according to a Congressional Research Service report. This includes fighters like the F-35 and critical radar aircraft like the E-3 Sentry airborne early warning-and-control system.
Stringer said countries that are looking at sixth-generation aircraft should be cautious.
“A lot of discussion on sixth-gen seems to be almost solely about flashy aircraft,” Stringer said. “We have to define what we actually mean by sixth-gen air warfare, and then we can build the right mix of systems.”
The U.S. war in Iran has stretched on for more than four months, and no immediate diplomatic end to the conflict has emerged. Stringer ended his speech by pointing to Epic Fury as an example of how the changing threat environment means the U.S. can’t quite manage two ongoing conflicts at once.
“A younger, better-looking, and thinner version of me that joined the air force joined it at a time when U.S. doctrine could reasonably expect to fight and win two separate theater campaigns,” Stringer said. “We are no longer in that place, and what you're seeing through the likes of Epic Fury, but elsewhere, just geopolitics full-stop, and the demand signals being placed on air and space forces, means that simultaneity is now a thing. It's not actually an abstract concept. Which means we're going to have to prioritize. We're going to have to make choices.”
Gen. Kenneth Wilsbach, the U.S. Air Force’s chief of staff, told attendees that Epic Fury “demonstrated the ability of modern air and space power to generate effects across vast distances at a speed unmatched by any other form of military power.”
Wilsbach also praised allies' support during the war in Iran, adding, “The most effective air power is combined air power.”
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One-quarter of the jobs Space Force leaders say they need went unfilled in fiscal 2025, partly because the young service lacks a solid way to track and use troops, civilian workers, and contractors, the Government Accountability Office found.
“The Space Force has not established a process or guidance to consistently and accurately determine its personnel needs to accomplish its missions. Relatedly, although it has estimated the number of contractor personnel supporting it, the Space Force does not have a process or guidance to accurately measure the number of contractor personnel and the nature of work they perform,” the GAO wrote in findings published Tuesday. “GAO also found that the Space Force is partly addressing personnel challenges, but its efforts are not guided by a comprehensive strategic workforce plan. Without such a plan, the Space Force may not be able to systematically plan for and manage a workforce that meets current and future mission needs.”
The Space Force filled just 13,500 of the 18,000 positions it said it needed in 2025, and shortages in cyber, enlisted, intelligence, and support roles put the service’s missions at risk, investigators wrote after analyzing Space Force staffing data and visiting five bases as part of a Congressionally-ordered probe into the service’s workforce woes.
“Even as the Space Force has continued to grow its workforce, officials have identified personnel shortfalls as a primary workforce challenge,” the report said. “GAO’s analysis found a 25 percent shortfall when comparing assigned personnel with total personnel requirements for fiscal year 2025. “
Investigators said that the Space Force, the smallest of the military service branches, has a process for determining the number of guardians, civilians, and contractors it needs that is is “not consistent,” “outdated” and does “not reflect mission growth.”.
The report comes as the service’s top leaders push to double the number of guardians and as it seeks a $71 billion budget request in 2027.
Last year, the Space Force had 4,649 officers (30 percent), 5,336 enlisted (35 percent), and 5,407 civilian personnel (35 percent), according to the report. Service officials told the GAO that it needs more enlisted guardians for its force-generation models.
“The proportion of officer to enlisted Guardians was approximately 1:1 (47 percent to 53 percent),” the GAO report read. “This is substantially higher than the average proportion of about 1:4 (20 percent to 80 percent) officer to enlisted personnel across the military services.”
Service officials and officers who spoke with GAO investigators said other key roles are also undermanned.
Senior Combat Forces Command officials also said there is “a critical deficiency of cyberspace expertise” within the service and senior field command officials “cited a shortage of intelligence analysts,” according to the GAO report.
The shortfalls aren’t just within the Space Force. The small service relies heavily on the Air Force for many of its support roles like security forces, lawyers, and installation support. GAO investigators found “a 22 percent shortfall in the number of support personnel the Air Force provides to the Space Force” and added that could “ increase risk” to the space service’s missions.
One official from a Space Base Delta told GAO that a shortfall of funded civil engineering positions is “leading to a higher risk of mission failure, and that the Space Force is taking risk against wartime readiness requirements and Joint Force needs.”
Another official from a Space Launch Delta told GAO “supporting increased space launch operations is becoming more challenging and unsustainable.” In one example, a Space Force delta had to close one of its six fire stations due to manning problems and the squadron can’t “meet National Fire Protection Association safety standards” and “providing enough fire crew support for launches leaves the remainder of the base vulnerable in case of an emergency.”
When the Pentagon unveiled the service’s budget request earlier this year, Jules W. Hurst III, who is performing the duties of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)/Chief Financial Officer, said workforce cuts implemented by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth didn’t affect “critical efforts” like “space acquisition.”
Space System Command, the service’s acquisition arm, lost roughly 10 percent of its workforce during last year’s cuts. Maj. Gen. Stephen Purdy, acting assistant Air Force secretary for space acquisition and integration said late last year that “we barely have enough acquirers to do all of the work that we have now.”
The GAO said major Trump-administration initiatives, such as the Golden Dome missile-defense effort, will strain the understaffed acquisition workforce.
“Officials expected that the development of the Golden Dome for America missile-defense system will increase demands on the Space Force’s acquisition, test and evaluation, and operator workforces.”
The GAO made four recommendations to the Space Force.
Investigators said the service should “establish a process to accurately determine personnel requirements,” accurately track its total number of contractor personnel, evaluate what manning needs are for long-term goals, and “evaluate the effectiveness of the current arrangement for Air Force-provided base operating and other support functions for the Space Force.
In their official response to the report, Defense Department officials concurred with all four recommendations.
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The firewall category is reinventing itself faster than at any point since NGFW arrived and 2026’s leaders aren’t just shipping better boxes, they’re redefining what “firewall” means. Palo Alto Networks is setting the bar for AI-driven inline prevention, Fortinet for hybrid mesh execution, and HPE Juniper for the quantum-safe era, while Zscaler and Cloudflare are proving the most consequential firewall of all might be no appliance whatsoever. Here […]
The post Top 10 Firewall Solutions Setting New Cybersecurity Standards in 2026 appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.
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Nearly two years after a cyberattack disrupted Transport for London’s (TfL) online services and exposed customer data, two…
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A lot of this week’s trouble starts with something that looks close enough. A familiar repo. A useful installer. A harmless sync setting. Then the handoff goes bad, the box starts talking to someone else, and the damage moves faster than the explanation. Old bugs are back, weak defaults are earning their keep, and some attack paths are so plain they barely feel like research. Here’s the mess.
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This week in cybersecurity from the editors at Cybercrime Magazine
Sausalito, Calif. – Jul. 16, 2026Kevin Mitnick, the world’s most famous hacker, passed away three years ago on Jul. 16, 2023.
Mitnick visited the Cybersecurity Ventures HQ and Cybercrime Magazine studios in Northport, N.Y. on Sat. Oct. 19, 2019, and we recorded five original videos with him:
1. His favorite hack ever, age 16, at a McDonald’s drive-thru;
2. His first social engineering hack, age 12, riding on a bus;
3. Shopping cart competition, age 10, parking lot of Hughes Market;
4. The FBI donuts story, a must-watch classic;
5. Hacking from Solitary Confinement. A true phreaking story!
Mitnick was 59 when he died peacefully after valiantly battling pancreatic cancer for more than a year. Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple, came on the Cybercrime Magazine Podcast not long after that to reminisce about his friend. Woz tells a hilarious story at the end.
Watch the Kevin Mitnick Videos
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).
- PRESS. Cybersecurity industry news and press releases in real time from the editors at Business Wire.
- PODCAST. New episodes daily on the Cybercrime Magazine Podcast feature victims, law enforcement, vendors, and cybersecurity experts.
- RADIO. Tune into WCYB Digital Radio at Cybercrime.Radio, the first and only round-the-clock internet radio station devoted to cybersecurity.
Contact us to send story tips, feedback and suggestions, and for sponsorship opportunities and custom media productions.
The post The Best Of Kevin Mitnick On The Cybercrime Magazine YouTube Channel appeared first on Cybercrime Magazine.
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n8n, the workflow automation platform, handed out the wrong accounts at login. On Enterprise instances configured to trust more than one external token issuer, it matched an incoming JWT to a local user on the sub claim alone and ignored iss. A valid token from issuer A carrying a sub that belongs to someone under issuer B logged you in as them. Their password never
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Millions of internet-connected Shark robot vacuums may be vulnerable to a critical remote code execution (RCE) flaw that could allow attackers to control devices remotely, access onboard cameras, retrieve home maps, and potentially steal stored Wi-Fi credentials. An independent researcher disclosed this issue following a 90-day reporting period, and it arises from overly permissive AWS […]
The post Millions of Shark Robot Vacuums Vulnerable to Unpatched Remote Code Execution Flaw appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.
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England did not make it to the World Cup final, but London Town will likely still be buzzing next week as the Farnborough International Airshow kicks off Monday. And while last week’s NATO Summit got a bit prickly, there’s an appetite for unity amid increasing global tensions.Dozens of countries, major weapons makers, defense tech companies, and suppliers are expected at the weeklong show. And states’ representatives will be there as well, trying to draw international business.
Trends to watch are how the U.K. and other European countries are spending their newly padded defense budgets. Are they buying more U.S. weapons? Or are they buying more homegrown tech? And for U.S. companies, what are they pitching?
BAE Systems is teasing a futuristic fighter pilot helmet. Northrop Grumman plans to talk up its F-16 modernization efforts, including electronic warfare system upgrades, and Raytheon will showcase its Coyote counterdrone system:
“It's the first major show since multiple theaters of operation have been using the Coyote system,” Joseph DeAntona, a Raytheon executive who focuses on land and air defense, told reporters Monday. “I think the customers that are attending Farnborough will be…wanting to know more about it and what it would take for them to potentially consider Coyote as a counter-UAS solution for them.”
And while it’s not flashy, aircraft maintenance and repair could be big—especially as private capital moves in.
“There's also a ton of interest in the [maintenance, repair, and overhaul] business, for example. We're seeing a lot of private equity and, you know, financial sponsors interested in that space,” Doug Peck, managing director at the consulting firm BCG, told Defense One. “There's going to be no shortage of demand for these aircraft, these systems, over time—whether that's from just the commercial passenger travel market or from the military side. But…the capacity to actually keep up with that growth is much stickier. So you're just seeing backlogs for these basic sustainment facilities and MRO facilities just really, really grow. And therefore the margins that they're going to be able to demand should only look better over time as well.”
It’ll be my first time at the airshow. If you’re there, you’ll likely catch me in Converse singing Fergie’s “London Bridge” in celebration after I file a story.
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 pub recommendations to lwilliams@defenseone.com. Check out the Defense Business Brief archive here, and tell your friends to subscribe!
Pushback on buybacks ban. The Chamber of Commerce joined dozens of trade organizations in a bid to get Congress to remove a provision in the 2027 National Defense Authorization Act that would prohibit defense contractors from paying dividends or repurchasing publicly traded stock without a waiver from the Pentagon.
- “The restriction applies broadly to contractors providing any goods or services … regardless of the dollar value of the contract,” with the Defense Department, trade groups wrote in a July 14 letter to Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Senators Roger Wicker and Jack Reed, who lead the Senate Armed Services Committee.
- The letter states the ban would bar large swaths of companies from contracting with the Pentagon and, more broadly, affect Americans’ retirement accounts.
- “If adopted, Section 815 would harm millions of American retirees and other investors by restricting lawful returns of capital to shareholders, establish a troubling precedent for federal interference in corporate governance and capital allocation decisions, and discourage the private sector from participating in the defense industrial base at a time when Congress should be encouraging greater private-sector participation.”
- Background: Senate Democrats blocked advancement of the typically bipartisan annual defense policy bill, setting up a showdown for funding the Iran war. Sen. Jack Reed, the ranking member on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said in a statement he couldn’t “vote to proceed to a bill that enables an ongoing war against Iran that Congress never authorized and the American people overwhelmingly oppose.” Then he said: “We also cannot ignore a nearly 45 percent increase in defense spending at a moment when the Pentagon has refused to provide an account for the true cost of this war or submit basic information to Congress.”
- State of play: Following the failed Senate vote, House Republicans unveiled a $90 million reconciliation bill on Wednesday, most of which would fund the Iran war. House Democrats voted to end aid to Israel for the Iran war.
Spotlight on the Pennsylvania defense industrial base. Wednesday’s Pennsylvania Defense and Innovation Summit hosted by Sen. Dave McCormick, R-Pa., at the Army War College had quite a turnout, with a spate of defense tech company announcements—including $10 billion in defense investments—and a keynote speech from President Donald Trump.
- JPMorgan Chase pledged $24 million to help finance a new submarine manufacturing facility at the Philadelphia Navy Yard. The investment would be a part of the more than-trillion-dollar commitment to national and economic security efforts made last year.
- Gecko Robotics announced plans to open a 10,000 square-foot advanced manufacturing plant in Pittsburgh. The plan is for the facility to be a “manufacturing and integration hub where Gecko will work alongside partners from across the Defense Industrial Base to integrate robotics into advanced manufacturing processes with its AI-powered non-destructive testing technologies,” the company said in a news release.
- Trump’s take: “Since I took office, defense investments in Pennsylvania are up by nearly 25 percent,” the president claimed. “And today, we're adding [$]10 billion, and I think the number is going to end up being about $19 or $20 billion dollars. And we'll be building two massive national security, multi-mission vessels at the beautiful and historic Philadelphia shipyard.”
Making moves + other news
- Bryan Fenton, the former head of Special Operations Command, has joined counter-UAS tech maker RADD as a senior advisor, Defense One has learned. Fenton also has advisor roles with a16z’s American Dynamism firm, and HawkEye 360, a geospatial intelligence company. The retired general is also a board member at Mantech and an executive for the Carlyle Group.
- The Army broke ground on a $635.2 million ammunition plant in Middletown, Iowa, the service announced Wednesday. The Future Artillery Complex at the Iowa Army Ammunition Plant is expected to produce 432,000 M795 artillery rounds a year once fully built, according to a news release.
- The Navy awarded Florida State University $88 million to research and develop testing systems, modeling, and simulation for shipboard power and energy systems.
- The U.S. war on Iran has spurred $12.3 billion in venture capital investment in defense technology, the Financial Times reports. Last year, companies in that sector raised nearly $10 billion.
- Venture capital firm Red Cell Partners added Glenn Youngkin, the former Virginia governor, to its board as chairman. The company invests in defense tech companies Epirus, Red 6, Reveal Technology, and Valinor. (Fun fact: Veronica Daigle, who leads the firm’s national security team, was on stage at Defense One’s Tech Summit. Catch the recap here.)
- Vatn Systems announced its “all-in-one autonomous mine countermeasures system” called SIGURD, which can detect, track, and neutralize sea-based mines.
- BigBear AI is expanding its generative AI platform for national security use.
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