Patch Tuesday November 2025: Microsoft Fixes 63 Security Flaws, Including a Windows Kernel Zero‑Day
Every month, IT teams brace themselves for Microsoft’s Patch Tuesday. November 2025 is one for the record books: Microsoft has released fixes for 63 security vulnerabilities, including a Windows Kernel zero‑day actively exploited in the wild. For organizations that rely on Windows, this update is not optional — it’s urgent.
Firefox’s New Anti‑Fingerprinting Protections & How to Boost Your Home Privacy
The descendant of Netscape is still fighting for users. Mozilla Firefox 145 introduces new anti‑fingerprinting defenses that make it harder for advertisers and trackers to build a unique digital signature of your device. For now, these protections are available in Private Browsing Mode and Enhanced Tracking Protection (ETP) Strict, but Mozilla plans to enable them by default after testing.
AI-Powered Malware: When Even Gemini’s Creators Sound the Alarm
It’s probably not a good sign when the same company that built Gemini—one of the most advanced AI systems on the planet—starts warning us about AI-powered malware families now active in the wild. If the people pushing the boundaries of generative AI are raising red flags, it’s time for the rest of us to pay attention.
The truth is simple: everyone is using AI today. Businesses, creators, students, and yes—threat actors. Why wouldn’t cybercriminals want to leverage the same tools that are transforming industries? The difference is that while most of us are using AI to innovate, attackers are using it to weaponize adaptability, scale, and deception. And that’s where things get scary.
Apple’s 26.1 Update: Sunglasses for Liquid Glass, Armor for Your Devices
While it’s nice to finally put some sunglasses on Liquid Glass, Apple’s recent 26.1 updates deliver more than cosmetic polish. They pack a serious security punch, addressing over 100 vulnerabilities across iPhones, Macs, and iPads. If you haven’t patched yet, now is the time.
Is That Really Your Coworker on Teams? The Hidden Risks of Collaboration Tool Impersonation
Microsoft Teams has become the backbone of modern business communication, with more than 300 million users relying on it for everything from quick chats to boardroom decisions. But recent discoveries of four critical security flaws serve as a stark reminder: the person on the other side of your Teams chat may not be who you think they are.