Threat Intelligence Report — June 8, 2026 | 6 New KEVs · 127 Victims

Report Date: 2026-06-08

New KEVs: 6  — unchanged vs last weekRansomware Victims: 127  ▼ -28 vs last week

6 vulnerabilities were added to the CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog this period. Linux products show the strongest concentration of risk signals this week. Ransomware activity is moderate with 127 new victims posted to leak sites over the last 7 days, with Thegentlemen posting the most victims.

Patch This Week

The top 3 KEVs to remediate right now, ranked by CISA deadline proximity, ransomware exploitation, and severity. These are confirmed exploited — if you do nothing else today, patch these.

  1. CVE-2025-48595 – Android Framework | CVSS 8.4 | EPSS 0.5% / 68th pct
    CISA deadline: 2026-06-05 (overdue by 3d) — Apply mitigations per vendor instructions, follow applicable BOD 22-01 guidance for cloud services, or discontinue use of the product if mitigations are unavailable.
  2. CVE-2022-0492 – Linux Kernel | CVSS 7.8 | EPSS 33.7% / 97th pct | PoC Available
    CISA deadline: 2026-06-05 (overdue by 3d) — Apply mitigations per vendor instructions, follow applicable BOD 22-01 guidance for cloud services, or discontinue use of the product if mitigations are unavailable.
  3. CVE-2026-45247 – Mirasvit Mirasvit Full Page Cache Warmer | CVSS 9.3 | EPSS 6.1% / 91th pct
    CISA deadline: 2026-06-06 (overdue by 2d) — Apply mitigations per vendor instructions, follow applicable BOD 22-01 guidance for cloud services, or discontinue use of the product if mitigations are unavailable.

Top KEVs

Vulnerabilities confirmed actively exploited in the wild by CISA — ranked by ransomware use, then severity. Patch these before anything else.

New Today

  • CVE-2026-50751 – Check Point Security Gateway | CVSS 9.3 (CRITICAL) | AV: Network | EPSS 0.0% / 1th pct | Ransomware Use: No
  • CVE-2026-42271 – BerriAI LiteLLM | CVSS 8.7 (HIGH) | AV: Network | EPSS 4.1% / 89th pct | Ransomware Use: No

Still Outstanding

  • CVE-2026-45247 – Mirasvit Mirasvit Full Page Cache Warmer | CVSS 9.3 (CRITICAL) | AV: Network | EPSS 6.1% / 91th pct | Ransomware Use: No
  • CVE-2025-48595 – Android Framework | CVSS 8.4 (HIGH) | AV: Local | EPSS 0.5% / 68th pct | Ransomware Use: No
  • CVE-2022-0492 – Linux Kernel | CVSS 7.8 (HIGH) | AV: Local | EPSS 33.7% / 97th pct | Ransomware Use: No | PoC Available
  • CVE-2026-28318 – SolarWinds Serv-U | CVSS 7.5 (HIGH) | AV: Network | EPSS 6.7% / 91th pct | Ransomware Use: No

Security News

Advisories, threat research, and incident reports from 12 sources across government, commercial research, and security journalism — prioritized by source credibility.

Ransomware Activity

Victim counts posted to ransomware group leak sites — use this to gauge which groups are most active and which sectors and regions are being targeted.

28 new victims posted today
7-day total: 127 via Ransomware.live

Infostealer Exposure: 38 employee credentials and 7,634 user credentials compromised via infostealer malware across victim organisations — indicating credential theft likely preceded these ransomware deployments.

Most Active Groups

Thegentlemen 36 Qilin 20 Akira 10 Incransom 7 Play 5

Group Intelligence

  • ThegentlemenThe Gentlemen is a RaaS group that emerged in July–August 2025, rapidly claiming over 320 victims across 17+ countries by offering affiliates a 90% revenue share, deploying a Go-based locker against Windows, Linux, NAS, and BSD systems; a compromised C2 server in 2026 revealed more than 1,570 linked victims.
  • QilinQilin ransomware was first observed in July of 2022. Qilin Ransomware is written in Golang and supports multiple encryption modes; all of which are controlled by the operator. Qilin actors practice double extortion – demanding payment for a decryptor, as well as for the non-release of stolen data.
  • AkiraThe Akira ransomware group is said to have emerged in March 2023, and there's much speculation about its ties to the former CONTI ransomware group.<br> <br> It's worth noting that with the end of CONTI's operation, several affiliates migrated to independent campaigns such as Royal, BlackBasta, and others.<br> <br> According to some reports, Akira affiliates also work with other ransomware operations, such as Snatch and BlackByte, as an open directory of tools used by an Akira operator was identified, which also had connections to the Snatch ransomware.<br> <br> The first version of the Akira ransomware was written in C++ and appended files with the '.akira' extension, creating a ransom note named 'akira_readme.txt,' partially based on the Conti V2 source code. However, on June 29, 2023, a decryptor for this version was reportedly released by Avast.<br> <br> Subsequently, a version was released that fixed the decryption flaw on July 2, 2023. Since then, the new version is said to be written in Rust, this time called 'megazord.exe,' and it changes the extension to '.powerranges' for encrypted files.<br> <br> Most of Akira's initial access vectors use brute-force attempts on Cisco VPN devices (which use single-factor authentication only).<br> Additionally, exploitation of CVEs: CVE-2019-6693 and CVE-2022-40684 for initial access has been identified.<BR>Source: https://github.com/crocodyli/ThreatActors-TTPs
  • IncransomINC Ransom is a prolific ransomware-as-a-service operation active since July 2023 that systematically targets healthcare, government, education, and manufacturing sectors in North America and Europe, having posted over 200 victims in 2025 alone with no sector off-limits.
  • PlayInitially observed in June 2022, the Play ransomware (a.k.a PlayCrypt) operates through double extortion, targeting numerous organizations in Latin America. Its Initial Access method is quite similar to other ransomwares, involving attacks such as Phishing, Exposed Services to the Internet, and Valid Account compromises.<br> <br> On April 19, 2023, the security company Symantec published two new tools developed by the Play group. These tools allow the malicious actor to enumerate and exfiltrate data from the internal network. The post mentions the following: 'Play threat actors use the .NET infostealer to enumerate software and services via WMI, WinRM, Remote Registry, and Remote Service. The malware checks for the existence of security and backup software, as well as remote administration tools and other programs, saving the information in .CSV files that are compressed into a .ZIP file for later manual exfiltration by threat actors.'Source: https://github.com/crocodyli/ThreatActors-TTPs

Most Targeted Sectors

Business Services 22 Manufacturing 16 Healthcare 16 Transportation/Logistics 9 Technology 9

Top Countries

US (37), DE (7), IN (6), GB (6), TH (4)

Notable Incidents

  • www.elumax.com (Business Services · DE) — claimed by Krybit. Lumax is dedicated to maintaining high standards of ethics, corporate governance and effective accountability mechanisms… Press coverage →

Vendor-Specific Risks

Vendors with confirmed KEV exploitation this week — the stacked bar shows how that exposure breaks down across exploited CVEs (red), critical CVEs to watch (orange), and news mentions (yellow). Prioritize patching vendors with the largest red segment.

Linux 2 Android 1 Solarwinds 1 Mirasvit 1 Check Point 1 KEVs CVEs Mentions

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