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Trump hardens tone against Iran, says ‘may keep going’ with strikes | US-Israel war on Iran News

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After insisting for weeks that a peace deal between the United States and Iran is close, President Donald Trump has escalated his rhetoric against Tehran, suggesting that time has run out to reach a diplomatic solution to the crisis.

On Tuesday, the US military began striking targets inside Iran in response to the overnight downing of a helicopter over the Strait of Hormuz. Trump has since suggested that the US attacks may continue.

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“I may keep going,” the US president told Fox News on Wednesday. “They had a chance to sign a deal and survive.”

Later, at an Oval Office event, Trump told reporters, “We’re going to ⁠be attacking them, ⁠attacking them very hard.”

Iran has responded to the latest US strikes by launching missiles against bases that host US forces in Bahrain, Kuwait and Jordan.

While such back-and-forth attacks over the past few weeks have remained contained and wrapped up quickly, Trump’s comments suggest that the latest episode of fighting may not be over. That, in turn, has raised questions about whether the April 8 ceasefire has unravelled.

Trump told Fox News that Iran is “tapping the US along” with talks that have not led to a long-term agreement.

He renewed his threat to bomb the country’s power plants and bridges, despite concerns that attacking civilian infrastructure could constitute a war crime.

When asked about the threat during Wednesday’s Oval Office event, Trump said he would not confirm whether he planned to go ahead with the attacks. “But I could do that,” he said.

He also urged a swift conclusion to the ongoing US-Iran negotiations. “They should sign their deal,” he added.

Earlier in the day, Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform that Iran has been “completely defeated”, reiterating his claims of victory.

“They’ve taken too long to negotiate a deal that would have been great for them, now they will have to pay the price,” he said.

Iranian officials have stressed that they will not sign an agreement that does not recognise their country’s “rights”.

Tehran has also suggested that it is not afraid to return to war.

Despite Trump’s assertion that Iran is militarily defeated, Tehran has been able to respond to US attacks and maintain its blockade in the Strait of Hormuz, which has sent energy prices soaring.

On Wednesday, Haji Babaei, deputy speaker of the Iranian parliament, said diplomacy will work only when the “demands of the Iranian nation” are met.

“America will lose in the economic and military war,” Babaei was quoted as saying by the state news agency, IRNA.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian also said that Iran “must move” beyond the current state of “no war, no peace” in the region, but he stressed that his country “will not yield” in the face of threats.

“War is certainly not in the country’s interest, but if they seek to violate our dignity, our land and our territory, we will not surrender,” he said, according to IRNA.

Despite Trump’s hardening tone on Iran, he continues to face criticism at home for his handling of the war.

“This is your daily reminder that the President has lost total control of the Iran War and thus has lost interest,” Democratic Senator Chris Murphy wrote on the social media platform X on Wednesday.

“He now only obsesses over his ballroom and schemes to profit off the presidency while gas and grocery prices soar.”

Critics have noted that the US president has to contend with a busy domestic agenda that could dissuade him from fully resuming the war with Iran.

The US is cohosting the FIFA World Cup over the next five weeks. The country is also preparing for celebrations of the 250th anniversary of its independence, and the election campaign season for the November midterm election is heating up.



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Rep Jerry Nadler seemingly blames Trump for Knicks’ NBA Finals Game 3 loss

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President Donald Trump took some heat during Wednesday’s examination of the Sports Broadcasting Act.

Representatives ripped the National Football League for broadcasting games exclusively to streaming services, costing some fans nearly $1,000 to watch their favorite teams.

However, one Democratic rep felt it necessary to take an unrelated swipe at Trump after he attended Game 3 of the NBA Finals.

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U.S. President Donald Trump watching NBA Finals game at Madison Square Garden

President Donald Trump watches the start of Game 3 of the NBA Finals between the New York Knicks and San Antonio Spurs at Madison Square Garden in New York City on June 8, 2026. (Samuel Corum/Getty Images)

Trump became the first sitting president to attend the NBA Finals when he watched his hometown New York Knicks and the San Antonio Spurs at Madison Square Garden. The Knicks won the first two games of the series in San Antonio before dropping Monday’s home game.

In a hearing that was largely about the NFL having fans pay absurd prices to watch games on streaming sites, Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., seemed to blame Trump for the Knicks’ loss.

“We cannot discuss anything related to sports today without taking note of the sports story happening in this country today – the New York Knicks’ drive for an NBA championship. Tonight is Game 4, and as long as Donald Trump stays far away from Madison Square Garden, the Knicks should do fine. Let’s go Knicks,” Nadler said.

Rep. Jerry Nadler speaking during a House Judiciary Committee hearing in Washington, D.C.

Rep. Jerry Nadler, a Democrat from New York, speaks during a House Judiciary Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., on June 9, 2026. (Elizabeth Frantz/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

TRUMP SAYS NBA IS ‘GOOD ENTERTAINMENT’ DESPITE IT BEING ‘A LITTLE LEFT-WING’ AFTER ATTENDING FINALS

Trump received a massive reaction from the Madison Square Garden crowd on Monday, mostly in contrast with how he was received in Florida for the college football national championship.

Trump’s arrival in New York involved enhanced security throughout the city. A security fence went up around MSG. The Secret Service and other law enforcement officials performed their duties to the highest standard, which meant longer lines and wait times to get into the arena.

Watch parties in the area were canceled, with the NYPD claiming it was because of security for Trump’s visit. They will return for Game 4 on Wednesday.

U.S. President Donald Trump looking on at Madison Square Garden during NBA Finals game

President Donald Trump watches before Game 3 of the 2026 NBA Finals between the San Antonio Spurs and New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden in New York City on June 8, 2026. (Al Bello/Getty Images)

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Trump has attended numerous sporting events since beginning his second term, including the Super Bowl in New Orleans two seasons ago, the Daytona 500, the college football national championship, the men’s tennis U.S. Open and the Ryder Cup, among others.

Fox News’ Scott Thompson contributed to this report.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.



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China-Linked JDY Botnet Expands to 1,500+ Devices for Cyber Reconnaissance

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Cybersecurity researchers have warned of a “resurgence and expansion” of JDY, a covert network associated with China-nexus state-sponsored threat actors.

“The JDY botnet comprises over 1,500 SOHO [small office and home office] and IoT devices and operates as a centrally controlled, high-performance scanner used to discover, fingerprint, and continuously map exposed services at scale,” Lumen’s Black Lotus Labs said in a report shared with The Hacker News.

JDY was first flagged as a cluster within another botnet codenamed KV-botnet in mid-December 2023. Primarily used for broader scanning against internet targets, the stealthy network comprising compromised SOHO routers, firewalls, and IoT devices has been put to use by Chinese hacking groups like Volt Typhoon.

Following KV-botnet’s takedown by the U.S. government in early 2024, the botnet operators began making behavioral changes to the network, with the second KV cluster largely going offline. It’s suspected that the botnet is offered by the operators to various hacking outfits, while carrying out reconnaissance and targeting on their own.

The latest findings from Black Lotus Labs show that the malware has expanded in scope to infect a broader range of devices and act as a conduit to feed “structured reconnaissance data” into a larger scanning ecosystem for follow-on target identification and exploitation.

Specifically, the JDY cluster is being used to conduct targeted scanning and service fingerprinting with an aim to flag vulnerable infrastructure following public disclosures. This points to an industrialized reconnaissance effort, the results of which are leveraged by Chinese nation-state groups.

This has been complemented by a growth in the botnet’s size, which has surged from 650 bots at the start of January 2024 to more than 1,500 compromised devices. Most of the hacked nodes are located in the U.S. and Brazil, followed by Europe and Asia.

Where previously the cluster primarily featured Cisco RV320 and RV325 routers, the present makeup of the botnet is a lot more diverse, including devices from Araknis, Mimosa Networks, Ubiquiti, Draytek, Hikvision, and Linksys.

“The botnet’s large number of U.S.-based SOHO/IoT devices enables the botnet operators to evade defenses and traditional IP-based controls, such as geofencing, IP reputation-based detection, and static blocklists,” Black Lotus Labs said.

“By distributing their scanning and reconnaissance activity across a wide range of IP addresses, the operators make it less likely that any single IP will be labeled as a scanner and blocked. Additionally, using compromised SOHO and IoT devices helps this activity blend in with legitimate user traffic.”

The architecture that powers the botnet is best described as layered: the operators use Tor nodes to manage infected infrastructure, including both the command-and-control (C2) and payload servers. The C2 servers direct the bots to perform targeted reconnaissance and system profiling, as opposed to indiscriminate scanning. Results of the scans are sent to central servers for ongoing intelligence gathering in an effort to further Chinese threat actors’ objectives.

Attack chains weaponize newly disclosed vulnerabilities in edge devices (e.g., CVE-2026-35616) to deliver a shell script dropper that checks if the malware is already active, and if not, proceeds to download the primary payload based on the detected processor architecture (e.g., mips, mips64, mipsel, or mipsel64). Once the malware is launched, it’s deleted from disk.

The malware that facilitates scanning and target reconnaissance is designed to fingerprint the host, receive scanning tasks from a central C2 server, carry out high-volume TCP, SSL, UDP, and ICMP-assisted probing, capture responses (TLS certificates, metadata, etc.), and report the results back to the dispatch server. The goal is to conduct infrastructure reconnaissance rather than exploitation.

A noteworthy functionality of the malware is its ability to adapt its scanning methodology based on its privileges on the local system. If it can open a raw socket, an indication of root privileges, it initiates high-speed SYN scanning using custom-crafted TCP packets. If raw sockets are unavailable or if the task is a web scan, the scanning engine resorts to using standard TCP and TLS connections or employs protocols like UDP and ICMP.

This activity most likely informs asset discovery, vulnerability-targeting pipelines, and downstream exploitation or attack-orchestration systems, the cybersecurity company said.

“JDY demonstrates how IoT/SOHO botnets and covert networks of compromised devices are being used for rapid vulnerability exploitation,” the company said. “JDY’s growth and continued operation illustrate how modern reconnaissance networks persist despite takedowns and adapt as a durable capability within a broader adversary ecosystem.”

“JDY’s evolution from a supporting component of the KV-botnet to an independent, high-performance reconnaissance capability demonstrates that disruption of individual nodes or clusters does not eliminate the underlying capability. The capability persists, adapts, and continues to provide adversaries with timely targeting data, often within hours of vulnerability disclosure.”



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Mass shooting with at least 10 attackers in Johannesburg | Gun Violence

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A manhunt is underway for at least 10 suspects in a mass shooting that left 12 people dead near Johannesburg, South Africa. The motive for the attack is not known but Al Jazeera’s Fahmida Miller reports that recent shootings have been linked to turf wars or gang violence.



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Rep. Chip Roy introduces legislation to revoke SPLC tax-exempt status after tense hearing

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FIRST ON FOX: A left-wing nonprofit accused by the Department of Justice of secretly funding the extremism it claims to combat is facing a new threat from Capitol Hill.

Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, introduced legislation Wednesday that would revoke the Southern Poverty Law Center’s (SPLC) tax-exempt status, ramping up pressure on the civil rights nonprofit organization amid a federal probe into alleged financial crimes. 

The measure’s introduction comes after Roy vowed Tuesday to target the law center’s tax-exempt status after grilling Bryan Fair, the SPLC’s interim chief executive, about its record of targeting mainstream conservative organizations during a contentious oversight hearing.

“The SPLC has built a business in smearing Christian conservatives and profiting from labeling its ideological opponents as ‘extremists’ and ‘hate groups,’” Roy said in a statement obtained by Fox News Digital. “Tax-exempt status should be reserved for charitable organizations serving the public good — not groups engaged in partisan political warfare.”

Rep. Chip Roy speaking to reporters at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.

Rep. Chip Roy speaks to reporters after the House passed a Department of Homeland Security funding bill at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on April 30, 2026. (Graeme Sloan/Getty Images)

FIRST ON FOX: SPLC’S LEGAL WOES GROW AS JIM JORDAN FIRES LATEST SALVO AT LEFT-WING GROUP

“The Stop SPLC Act would simply revoke the SPLC’s tax-exempt status and end the special tax benefits it has enjoyed for far too long,” he added.

A spokesperson for the nonprofit did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

The legislation comes as the SPLC is accused of routing $4.1 million in tax-exempt donor funds to various extremist organizations — including the Ku Klux Klan and the United Klans of America — between 2010 and 2023, using fictitious accounts and committing bank fraud to conceal the payments.

The group has insisted its informant program “saved lives,” but federal prosecutors allege hate groups that received the donor money used a portion of it for recruitment purposes and to purchase materials, such as wood for cross burnings and KKK paraphernalia.

Fair has denied that the SPLC did anything wrong and largely declined to discuss the allegations Tuesday.

The law center has 501(c)(3) status as a nonprofit organization, which means financial contributions to the group are tax-deductible.

Bryan Fair speaking during a House Judiciary Committee hearing in Washington, D.C.

Bryan Fair, interim president and CEO of the Southern Poverty Law Center, speaks during a House Judiciary Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., on June 9, 2026. (Elizabeth Frantz/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

HOW MUTINY AT SOUTHERN POVERTY LAW CENTER TRIGGERED LEADERSHIP COLLAPSE

Roy’s bill could threaten the group’s flush finances, as donations surged during the period it operated the now-defunct informant program. 

“Advancing hatred has become quite profitable for the SPLC, as in 2024, the organization had over $829 million in assets and an endowment of approximately $730.8 million and $120.9 million in revenue,” Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wy., said Tuesday. “The bulk of this money comes from the contributions of the SPLC donors.”

Turning Point USA, the Family Research Council and Moms for Liberty are among the conservative organizations listed on the law center’s annual “hate map” database alongside neo-Nazi and White supremacist groups.

GOP lawmakers pressed Fair Tuesday about those designations and the notable omission of leftist groups.

“How many leftist anti-Jewish groups do you have listed on your website,” Roy asked Fair. “How many extremist Islamic groups do you have?”

Fair did not name an organization that fit either criteria, prompting Roy to suggest that the left-wing nonprofit intentionally targets conservative Christian groups.

“So you think there’s a bunch of Islamic groups that are pro-LGBTQ?” the Texas lawmaker then asked Fair, triggering laughs from the hearing room. “Is that the position of the SPLC? I just want to make sure the record is reflecting that.”

“We target no group or label … because of its religion,” Fair insisted.

Fair also defended the law center’s decision to designate Turning Point, a conservative youth activism powerhouse founded by the late Charlie Kirk, as an extremist organization.

“It is our position that TPUSA expresses views and vilifies other people based on immutable characteristics, exposing them to our listing,” Fair told Roy. 

Turning Point USA CEO Erika Kirk slammed Fair’s comments during a post on social media Tuesday.

Erika Kirk speaking at a Turning Point USA event in Phoenix, Arizona.

Erika Kirk, widow of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, speaks at a Turning Point USA event at Dream City Church in Phoenix on April 17, 2026. (Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images)

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“Turning Point USA has, from the beginning, stood for open conversations and respectful debate regardless of creed or color,” Kirk, the wife of the late Charlie Kirk, said. “All along, the real hate group is the SPLC, which recklessly sows hate every day with its lies.”

Roy has also introduced legislation to revoke the tax-exempt status of the national Muslim advocacy group, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), but the bill has since stalled in committee. Republicans have sharply criticized the nonprofit over alleged ties to terrorism.



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Florida lawsuit alleges wrongful arrest after police AI facial recognition error | Florida

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A Florida man is suing several law enforcement agencies for his arrest and prosecution for allegedly luring a child after he was wrongly identified using faulty AI facial recognition software.

According to the Jacksonville Beach police department, an algorithm returned a 93% probability that Robert Dillon was the man caught on security cameras at a McDonald’s in the town attempting to persuade the unaccompanied girl, aged younger than 12, to leave with him.

Dillon, however, lives in Fort Myers, more than 300 miles and a five-hour drive away, and told detectives he had never been to Jacksonville Beach in his life.

The case was dismissed and charges dropped last year over the August 2024 incident.

Now the 52-year-old has filed a lawsuit against the police department, the Jacksonville sheriff’s office, and Bob Gualtieri, the sheriff of Pinellas county, whose agency maintains and operates the Faces (Face Analysis Comparison and Examination) system and leases it to other law enforcement.

“[The] investigation resulted in the wrongful arrest and prosecution of an innocent man,” the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) said in a lawsuit filed on Dillon’s behalf on Tuesday in district court in Fort Myers.

“Mr Dillon was arrested at his home in front of his wife. He was accused of attempting to lure a child, a charge carrying devastating social stigma and permanent reputational destruction. He was subjected to months of criminal prosecution, and publicly branded with a mugshot that remains accessible online, long after the charges were dropped.

“He no longer feels comfortable being friendly to children. No law enforcement agency has ever apologized or acknowledged the error.”

The lawsuit further alleges that Dillon’s case is at least the 15th nationally to have involved a person being charged or arrested after a false identification.

A Guardian investigation last month found that oversight of AI facial recognition systems was woefully inadequate, in the UK and elsewhere, and that advances in the technology were far outpacing authorities’ ability to regulate it.

“Rather than test the machine’s answer against the evidence that would have cleared him, the officers built a case to confirm it,” Dillon’s lawsuit said.

It identified Scott O’Connell, JBPD’s lead investigator on the case, as having deliberately omitted “multiple categories of readily verifiable exculpatory evidence” from the arrest affidavit.

The court document said license plate readers showed none of Dillon’s vehicles were ever near the restaurant. It also alleged O’Connell withheld from the arrest warrant’s issuing magistrate that the photograph run through the Faces software of the suspect was a low-definition, poor quality screen grab of security footage taken on an officer’s cellphone, not a digital upload from the recording itself.

Additionally, the lawsuit states, O’Connell did not challenge the assertion of a McDonald’s employee – who picked out Dillon from a photo line-up of six similar faces – that the suspect was a “regular customer” at her restaurant who had visited multiple times in previous weeks.

O’Connell was aware Dillon lived hundreds of miles away, the lawsuit said, and knew that would have been impossible.

“These Florida police departments owe it to Mr Dillon to make amends and to take serious steps to make sure this doesn’t happen to anyone else,” Nate Freed Wessler, deputy director of the ACLU’s speech, privacy, and technology project, said in a statement.

“Police across the country are on notice: Unreliable face recognition technology is hurting people, and we will keep fighting to hold them accountable for these abuses.”

In a separate but similar case reported earlier this month, Jalil Richardson, of Charlotte, North Carolina, said he was extradited to Jacksonville and spent almost three months in jail after automated facial recognition placed him at the scene of a car theft. Timecards showed he was at work 400 miles away when the theft occurred.

Dillon, meanwhile, said he remained traumatized by his experience.

“Over a year later, I’m still picking up the pieces of my life, all because the police relied on this dangerous technology instead of doing their jobs and actually investigating,” he said.

“Florida police must implement safeguards and ensure this never happens to anyone else, because until they do, nobody is safe.”

The Guardian has contacted the Jacksonville Beach police department for comment.



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Reference #18.c5d07868.1781109251.4c618b84

https://errors.edgesuite.net/18.c5d07868.1781109251.4c618b84



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DOJ opens civil rights investigation into CUNY Black Male Initiative

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The Department of Justice’s (DOJ) Civil Rights Division announced an investigation into the City University of New York (CUNY) over its “Black Male Initiative (BMI).”

According to the CUNY website, BMI’s mission “is to increase, encourage, and support the inclusion and educational success of students from groups that are severely underrepresented in higher education, in particular African, African American/Black, Caribbean and Latino/Hispanic males.”

In a press release on Tuesday, the DOJ confirmed that it has begun investigating the New York institution for potentially violating Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits discrimination based on race or color by institutions that receive federal financial aid.

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY CHANGES ‘ILLEGAL’ PROGRAM THAT EXCLUDED WHITE MEN

Harmeet Dhillon

Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon released a statement on the investigation Tuesday. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

“Race can never play a role when deciding how to distribute educational resources or opportunities,” Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon said in a statement. “This Justice Department will not tolerate universities directing educational benefits to certain students over others based on their race.”

The DOJ clarified that the Civil Rights Division “has not reached any conclusions” regarding the university yet.

Fox News Digital reached out to CUNY for comment but did not immediately receive a response.

NEW YORK GOVERNOR WARNED TO FIX RACE-BASED COLLEGE PROGRAM OR BE TAKEN TO COURT

CUNY sign outside of building

The City University of New York’s (CUNY) Black Male Initiative was implemented across 24 schools, according to a civil rights complaint. (Erik McGregor/LightRocket via Getty Images)

The Black Male Initiative began at the City University of New York approximately 21 years ago with the goal of increasing the enrollment, retention and graduation rates of underrepresented students. The initiative was originally investigated in 2012 under the Obama administration, which determined it was “permissible for a college to conduct race-targeted recruiting.”

The initiative was also the subject of a civil rights complaint last month by the Equal Protection Project (EPP), which noted that BMI operates across 24 New York campuses and that White students are more often than not minorities at CUNY.

“If CUNY had a ‘White Male Initiative’ structured similarly to BMI such race-based recruiting would not be tolerated, much less funded and promoted. It is up to DOJ to ensure that the civil rights laws are enforced in a race-neutral manner,” the EPP wrote in its complaint.

FEDERAL PROBE CLAIMS UNIVERSITIES ARE ‘LEGITIMIZING AND AMPLIFYING ANTISEMITISM’

Black-college-students

The Black Male Initiative has been pushed across New York campuses for 21 years. (Getty Images)

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This announcement is the latest in a long list of investigations by the Trump administration into U.S. universities for allegedly violating civil rights through initiatives that favored minority students.



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CISA directive orders agencies to prioritize vulnerability patching in a new way

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The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency on Wednesday ordered federal agencies to prioritize vulnerabilities based on four criteria, as part of push to “patch smarter, not harder.”

Federal agencies should emphasize patches for vulnerabilities that affect a publicly exposed asset, allow an attacker to fully automate exploitation, give attackers the ability to take over control of a system or relate to evidence of active, real-world exploitation, CISA declared.

CISA acting director Nick Andersen previewed the binding operational directive (BOD) Tuesday, framing it as a rethinking of vulnerability management more broadly.

“This Directive provides clear definitions, timelines and criteria that enhances transparency, predictability and agencies’ resource planning to execute more effective vulnerability remediation,” Andersen said in a statement. “CISA is leading and collaborating with federal civilian agencies to stay ahead of our adversaries as tactics, technologies and vulnerabilities change.”

BOD 26-04 sets forth timelines for how quickly agencies must fix a vulnerability based on how many of the four criteria it meets. If it meets all four, for example, agencies need to fix it within three days and carry out a “forensic triage” to assess whether their systems were compromised. 

More generally, agencies must immediately update their vulnerability management policies, including establishing a process for ongoing remediation of known, exploited vulnerabilities (KEVs) on CISA’s “must-patch” list. Within 60 days, agencies need to update their processes for remediating common vulnerabilities, and within 180 days, agencies must meet the order’s remediation timelines.

The directive is motivated in part by how artificial intelligence is shifting the window from vulnerability discovery to weaponization, and CISA said it reflects priorities in an executive order on AI that President Donald Trump signed last week.

BODs aren’t mandatory for anyone outside of federal agencies, but CISA encourages the private sector to embrace them. CISA officials said in a blog post about the need to “patch smarter, not harder” that “defenders are already struggling to keep up.”

“Artificial intelligence is assisting both researchers and adversaries in identifying flaws in software, vastly increasing the pace at which new vulnerabilities are discovered,” wrote Chris Butera, acting executive assistant director for cybersecurity, and Jonathan Spring , senior technical adviser. “Per Verizon’s 2026 Data Breach Investigations Report, only 26% of vulnerabilities on CISA’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) Catalog were fully remediated by organizations in 2025, a drop from the previous year’s 38%. The median time for full resolution rose to 43 days.”

Tim Starks

Written by Tim Starks

Tim Starks is senior reporter at CyberScoop. His previous stops include working at The Washington Post, POLITICO and Congressional Quarterly. An Evansville, Ind. native, he’s covered cybersecurity since 2003. Email Tim here: tim.starks@cyberscoop.com.


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The Light Within | Ep 5 – El Salvador | Prison

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In a Salvadoran prison, young women from rival gangs must live together, learning to co-exist and prepare for life beyond the penitentiary’s walls.

In El Salvador, a sweeping state of emergency has led to the widespread detention of young women connected to the gangs MS-13 and Barrio 18. Many are taken into custody in large-scale operations aimed at regaining control of communities long marked by gang influence.

Inside one of the country’s prisons, Andrea, Mayte, and Gamez – each tied to rival groups – now share the same cell. What began in confrontation slowly shifts as daily routines, structured activities, and the guidance of figures like Dolores, the prison director, help them navigate life together. Through this fragile co-existence, they begin to find moments of calm in a place built on separation and control.

As they speak openly about their pasts and channel their dreams into improvised rap verses, the young women imagine a life beyond the prison walls. Yet uncertainty hangs over every hope: they do not know when – or if – they will be able to reunite with their families under the country’s new security policies.

A film by Fatima Lianes



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