MCPwn Is Live. We Scanned the Supply Chains of 14 MCP Servers. Here's What We Found. April 18, 2026 MCPwn dropped this week. CVE-2026-33032 — CVSS 9.8, actively exploited, 2,600+ instances exposed. Two HTTP requests. No authentication. Full nginx server takeover. Then MCPwnfluence: CVE-2026-27825 and CVE-2026-27826. The most widely used Atlassian MCP server — SSRF chained with arbitrary file wri
This is Part 1 of a two-part series. Part 2 (coming soon): Connecting to spoke clusters from a controller using multicluster-runtime, driven by ClusterProfile. The Cluster Inventory API (multicluster.x-k8s.io) is driven by SIG-Multicluster and centered on the ClusterProfile resource. It only delivers value when something produces those ClusterProfiles. That something is a cluster manager. Today, t
When developers travel, we usually prepare the obvious things. Laptop charger. But there is one dependency that is easy to underestimate until it breaks: mobile internet. A trip to China makes this especially obvious. Not because China is hard to travel in, but because so many basic interactions are mobile-first: navigation, translation, ride-hailing, hotel communication, ticket confirmations, pay
If you maintain Go services, you've probably been here: a scanner flags a CVE, you spend 30 minutes tracing imports and call paths, and it turns out your code never touches the vulnerable function. I built GVS to automate that. Give it a repo URL and a CVE ID, and it does call graph analysis to determine whether the vulnerable symbols are actually reachable from your code. What it does: Builds cal
A defaced website is a curious problem. It's loud — anyone visiting the page can see something is wrong. But it's also quiet from a server's perspective: HTTP returns 200, your uptime monitor is happy, your TLS cert hasn't moved, and the CMS logs show a "successful" content update from a legitimate-looking session. The signal is on the rendered page, not in the metrics. I run a site at hi3ris.blue
The same AI that detects threats in milliseconds can be manipulated with a single sentence. There's a quiet revolution happening inside every modern Security Operations Center. It doesn't wear a hoodie. It doesn't sleep. It processes 10 million events per second without blinking. It's AI — and it's now your most powerful analyst, your fastest threat hunter, and your most complex attack surface all
You just ran a dependency scan and the report shows 133 vulnerabilities. 34 are Critical. 68 are High. The dashboard is red, the backlog is exploding, and every item looks urgent. The engineering team asks the obvious question: where do we start? This is where vulnerability remediation prioritization matters. Without a clear framework, teams either panic and chase the loudest CVE, or they ignore t
We've been there. JSON Schema gets hard to write as soon as your payload is non-trivial. Conditional logic, cross-field rules, business invariants, and at some point we stop writing contracts at all. We go code-first, generate the schema from annotations, and end up with 200 lines very few understand, and error messages referencing paths like #/properties/items/allOf/0/then/Then that map to nothin