SharePoint Servers under siege as zero-day exploit bypasses MFA protections

Attackers are currently exploiting a newly identified zero-day vulnerability in Microsoft SharePoint Server—CVE-2025-53770. This flaw enables threat actors to bypass multi-factor authentication controls and achieve remote, full system compromise. The vulnerability puts thousands of organizations at immediate risk, and security professionals have flagged the potential for large-scale disruption if the issue remains unaddressed. Read all

Dell brushes off data theft claim, says hackers got “fake files”

Dell says hackers accessed its isolated Solution Center and took mostly synthetic data used for demos—not customer info. The extortion group WorldLeaks claims to have stolen 1.3TB of files, but Dell downplays the breach, calling the material non-sensitive and public. The incident follows a confirmed 2024 breach involving real customer data and raises questions about cybercriminals shifting from ransomware to pure data theft. Read all

Skydance’s Paramount play could mean big Oracle Cloud Payday

In a move that is expected to reshape the media tech landscape, Skydance Media may soon ink a shadow‑600 million dollar contract with its cloud provider parent, Oracle. Launched by Larry Ellison’s son, David, Skydance has deepened its ties to Oracle over the years. Now, with Ellison senior backing its roughly 8 billion dollar acquisition of Paramount Global, Oracle stands to gain what Bloomberg reports could be a 100 million dollar per year deal—covering video and audio content from CBS and MTV, and likely more. Read all

Nokia opens up network APIs on Google Cloud to empower app developers

Nokia has brought three key telecom APIs—Quality of Service, Number Verification, and Device Location—onto Google Cloud Marketplace, giving developers direct access to real-time network features. By shifting telecom tools into the cloud-native workspace, Nokia simplifies how apps handle security, location, and connectivity. This marks a strategic leap in cloud-telco integration, allowing developers to build smarter, high-performance apps without managing traditional telecom infrastructure. Read all

CoreWeave turns to bonds as it chases cheaper capital amid rapid expansion

CoreWeave will sell $1.5 billion in unsecured bonds to reduce its rising debt load, deepening its pivot to public markets. The company recently revealed a $9 billion stock deal to acquire Core Scientific and committed $6 billion to a Pennsylvania data center buildout. With JPMorgan leading the latest offering, CoreWeave aims to shift from costly private loans to more sustainable financing as growth accelerates. Read all

AWS accelerates agentic AI adoption with production-ready tools at NYC Summit

AWS just rolled out a pretty hefty upgrade to their agentic AI toolkit at the 2025 Summit in New York, and, honestly, it’s a major shift. Forget the “neat proof-of-concept” era; AWS is gunning for enterprise production, no more excuses. Read all

Microsoft cuts China out of Pentagon cloud loop amid rising security alarm

Microsoft has stopped allowing engineers based in China to support U.S. military cloud services after a decade-long arrangement came under scrutiny. The move follows a ProPublica exposé and concerns from defense officials about potential cyber vulnerabilities. Despite U.S. oversight, some “digital escorts” lacked the expertise to supervise China-based teams effectively. The Pentagon has launched a full review, signaling tighter scrutiny of foreign involvement in military tech infrastructure. Read all

Security takes root at edge as Scale Computing, Bitdefender join forces

Scale Computing and Bitdefender are teaming up to actually integrate cybersecurity right into the edge platform, instead of tacking it on as an afterthought. They’re embedding Bitdefender’s GravityZone engine straight into the SC//Hypercore system. The result? The system builds security directly into the stack, running it alongside your workloads without requiring extra steps. Read all

DISA quietly opens $9B cloud program to small tech firms

The Defense Information Systems Agency is now inviting small businesses to join its $9 billion JWCC cloud initiative, once reserved for giants like AWS and Google. DISA seeks firms with deep expertise in multi-cloud engineering, cybersecurity, and application migration. While providers won’t need to supply hardware, the stakes are high—submissions close July 31. It’s a rare opening for smaller players to contribute directly to next-gen U.S. defense cloud strategy. Read all

BigScoots, Firm Performance partner to give legal websites a much-needed infrastructure overhaul

Legal professionals understand that websites do far more than attract clients—they quietly build trust. When those digital gateways fail, the fallout often reaches beyond slow page loads. For that reason, a new partnership between hosting provider BigScoots and digital agency Firm Performance signals a major shift in how law firms approach their online presence. Read all

Microsoft sets final deadline for exchange, Skype server security

Microsoft will give customers a final six-month window to secure Exchange Server 2016/2019 and Skype for Business 2015/2019, ending April 14, 2026. Organizations must opt in—and pay—for these updates, which won’t appear in public channels. The company stressed it won’t extend this grace period again. Many firms have delayed migrations, and Microsoft is now drawing a hard line as support expiration nears. Read all

Onlive Server eyes U.S. market shift with streamlined VPS plans tailored to developers, startups

As cloud costs rise and tech teams demand tighter control, Onlive Server has launched a new line of USA-based VPS plans aimed directly at developers, startups, and small enterprises seeking flexible infrastructure without unnecessary overhead. With pricing that begins at $11 per month, the company now offers virtual servers designed to adapt as users grow. Read all

Java Revolt: IT teams exit Oracle over licensing chaos

A sweeping industry shift is underway as over 80% of IT asset managers move away from Oracle Java, frustrated by opaque licensing terms and rising audit threats. Oracle’s 2023 per-employee pricing model has pushed teams to seek open-source alternatives, with 79% already migrating or planning to. The fallout marks a deeper reckoning with vendor control—and a growing push for transparency in software asset management. Read all

 

 

 

 

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