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Cybercriminals Target Fans Ahead of 2026 FIFA World Cup, Norton Warns

  Cybercriminals Target Fans Ahead of 2026 FIFA World Cup, Norton Warns With the 2026 FIFA World Cup still months away, cybersecurity exper...

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AIjacking Threat Exposed: How Hackers Hijacked Microsoft’s Copilot Agent Without a Single Click

 

Imagine this — a customer service AI agent receives an email and, within seconds, secretly extracts your entire customer database and sends it to a hacker. No clicks, no downloads, no alerts.

Security researchers recently showcased this chilling scenario with a Microsoft Copilot Studio agent. The exploit worked through prompt injection, a manipulation technique where attackers hide malicious instructions in ordinary-looking text inputs.

As companies rush to integrate AI agents into customer service, analytics, and software development, they’re opening up new risks that traditional cybersecurity tools can’t fully protect against. For developers and data teams, understanding AIjacking — the hijacking of AI systems through deceptive prompts — has become crucial.

In simple terms, AIjacking occurs when attackers use natural language to trick AI systems into executing commands that bypass their programmed restrictions. These malicious prompts can be buried in anything the AI reads — an email, a chat message, a document — and the system can’t reliably tell the difference between a real instruction and a hidden attack.

Unlike conventional hacks that exploit software bugs, AIjacking leverages the very nature of large language models. These models follow contextual language instructions — whether those instructions come from a legitimate user or a hacker.

The Microsoft Copilot Studio incident illustrates the stakes clearly. Researchers sent emails embedded with hidden prompt injections to an AI-powered customer service agent that had CRM access. Once the agent read the emails, it followed the instructions, extracted sensitive data, and emailed it back to the attacker — all autonomously. This was a true zero-click exploit.

Traditional cyberattacks often rely on tricking users into clicking malicious links or opening dangerous attachments. AIjacking requires no such action — the AI processes inputs automatically, which is both its greatest strength and its biggest vulnerability.

Old-school defenses like firewalls, antivirus software, and input validation protect against code-level threats like SQL injection or XSS attacks. But AIjacking is a different beast — it targets the language understanding capability itself, not the code.

Because malicious prompts can be written in infinite variations — in different tones, formats, or even languages — it’s impossible to build a simple “bad input” blacklist that prevents all attacks.

When Microsoft fixed the Copilot Studio flaw, they added prompt injection classifiers, but these have limitations. Block one phrasing, and attackers simply reword their prompts.

AI agents are typically granted broad permissions to perform useful tasks — querying databases, sending emails, and calling APIs. But when hijacked, those same permissions become a weapon, allowing the agent to carry out unauthorized operations in seconds.

Security tools can’t easily detect a well-crafted malicious prompt that looks like normal text. Antivirus programs don’t recognize adversarial inputs that exploit AI behavior. What’s needed are new defense strategies tailored to AI systems.

The biggest risk lies in data exfiltration. In Microsoft’s test, the hijacked AI extracted entire customer records from the CRM. Scaled up, that could mean millions of records lost in moments.

Beyond data theft, hijacked agents could send fake emails from your company, initiate fraudulent transactions, or abuse APIs — all using legitimate credentials. Because the AI acts within its normal permissions, the attack is almost indistinguishable from authorized activity.

Privilege escalation amplifies the damage. Since most AI agents need elevated access — for instance, customer service bots read user data, while dev assistants access codebases — a single hijack can expose multiple internal systems.

Many organizations wrongly assume that existing cybersecurity systems already protect them. But prompt injection bypasses these controls entirely. Any text input the AI processes can serve as an attack vector.

To defend against AIjacking, a multi-layered security strategy is essential:

  1. Input validation & authentication: Don’t let AI agents auto-respond to unverified external inputs. Only allow trusted senders and authenticated users.
  2. Least privilege access: Give agents only the permissions necessary for their task — never full database or write access unless essential.
  3. Human-in-the-loop approval: Require manual confirmation before agents perform sensitive tasks like large data exports or financial transactions.
  4. Logging & monitoring: Track agent behavior and flag unusual actions, such as accessing large volumes of data or contacting new external addresses.
  5. System design & isolation: Keep AI agents away from production databases, use read-only replicas, and apply rate limits to contain damage.

Security testing should also include adversarial prompt testing, where developers actively try to manipulate the AI to find weaknesses before attackers do.

AIjacking marks a new era in cybersecurity. It’s not hypothetical — it’s happening now. But layered defense strategies — from input authentication to human oversight — can help organizations deploy AI safely. Those who take action now will be better equipped to protect both their systems and their users.

Video Game Studios Exploit Legal Rights of Children


A study revealed that video game studios are openly ignoring legal systems and abusing the data information and privacy of the children who play these videogames.

Videogame developers discarding legal rights of children 

Researchers found that highly opaque frameworks of data collection in the intense lucrative video game market run by third-party companies and developers showed malicious intent. The major players freely discard children's rights to store personal data via game apps. Video game studios ask parents to accept privacy policies that are difficult to understand and also contradictory at times. 

Quagmire of videos games privacy laws

Their legality is doubtful. Video game studios are thriving on the fact that parents won't take the time to read these privacy laws carefully, and in case if they do, they still won't be able to complain because of the complexity of policies. 

Experts studied the privacy frameworks of video games for children aged below 13 (below 14 in Quebec) in comparison to legal laws in the US, Quebec, and Canada. 

Conclusion 

The research reveals an immediate need for government agencies to implement legal frameworks and predict when potential legal issues for video game developers can surface. In Quebec, a class action lawsuit has already been filled against the mobile gaming industry for violating children's privacy rights.

Need for robust legal systems 

Since there is a genuine need for legislative involvement to control studio operations, this investigation may result in legal action against studios whose abusive practices have been revealed as well as legal reforms. 

 Self-regulation by industry participants (studios and classification agencies) is ineffective since it fails to safeguard children's data rights. Not only do parents and kids lack the knowledge necessary to give unequivocal consent, but inaccurate information also gives them a false sense of security, especially if the game seems harmless and childlike.

Delhi Airport Hit by Rare GPS Spoofing Attacks Causing Flight Delays and Diversions

 


Delhi’s Indira Gandhi International Airport witnessed an unusual series of GPS spoofing incidents this week, where fake satellite signals were transmitted to mislead aircraft about their real positions. These rare cyber disruptions, more common in conflict zones or near sensitive borders, created severe flight congestion and diversions. 

According to reports, more than 400 flights were delayed on Friday alone, as controllers struggled to manage operations amid both spoofing interference and a separate technical glitch in the Air Traffic Control (ATC) system. The cascading impact spread across North India, disrupting schedules at several major airports. Earlier in the week, Delhi Airport ranked second globally for flight delays, as reported by the Times of India. 

At least seven flights had to be diverted to nearby airports such as Jaipur and Lucknow, even though all four of Delhi’s runways were fully operational. On Tuesday, the Navigation Integrity Category value—a critical measure of aircraft positioning accuracy—fell dramatically from 8 to 0, raising alarms within the aviation community. Pilots reported these irregularities within a 60-nautical-mile radius of Delhi, prompting the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) to initiate an investigation, as confirmed by The Hindu. 

The situation was worsened by the temporary shutdown of the main runway’s Instrument Landing System (ILS), which provides ground-based precision guidance to pilots during landings. The ILS is currently being upgraded to Category III, which will allow landings even in dense fog—a major requirement ahead of Delhi’s winter season. However, its unavailability has forced aircraft to rely heavily on satellite-based navigation systems, making them more vulnerable to spoofing attacks. GPS spoofing, a complex form of cyber interference, involves the deliberate transmission of counterfeit satellite signals to trick navigation systems. 

Unlike GPS jamming, which blocks genuine signals, spoofing feeds in false ones, making aircraft believe they are in a different location. For example, a jet actually flying over Delhi could appear to be over Chandigarh on cockpit instruments, potentially leading to dangerous course deviations. Such cyber manipulations have grown more frequent worldwide, raising serious safety concerns for both commercial and military aviation. 

In India, GPS spoofing incidents are not entirely new. The Centre informed Parliament earlier this year that 465 such cases were recorded between November 2023 and February 2025 along the India-Pakistan border, primarily near Amritsar and Jammu. A report by the International Air Transport Association (IATA) also revealed that over 430,000 cases of GPS jamming and spoofing were documented globally in 2024, a 62% increase from the previous year. The consequences of such interference have sometimes been deadly. 

In December 2024, an Azerbaijan Airlines aircraft crashed in Kazakhstan, reportedly due to Russian anti-aircraft systems misidentifying it amid GPS signal disruption. Earlier this year, an Indian Air Force aircraft flying humanitarian aid to earthquake-hit Myanmar encountered GPS spoofing suspected to originate from Chinese-enabled systems. Data from the GPSjam portal shows India’s borders with Pakistan and Myanmar among the world’s top five regions with poor navigation accuracy for aircraft. 

With Delhi Airport handling over 1,550 flights daily, even brief interruptions can cause widespread delays and logistical chaos. The Airports Authority of India (AAI) has assured that technical teams are working to strengthen the ATC system and implement safeguards to prevent future interference. As investigations continue, the recent incidents serve as a crucial reminder of the evolving cybersecurity challenges in modern aviation and the urgent need for resilient navigation infrastructure to ensure passenger safety in increasingly contested airspace.

Multi-Crore Fake GST Registration Racket Busted Across 23 States

 

A sophisticated fake GST registration racket operating across 23 Indian states has resulted in a multi-crore tax evasion scam, exploiting weaknesses in the Goods and Services Tax (GST) system to generate fraudulent input tax credit (ITC) and evade government revenue on a large scale.

The modus operandi largely involves creating fake GST registrations using forged documentation, including bogus Aadhaar and PAN cards, to establish shell entities with no actual business operations. These entities then issue fabricated invoices and generate e-way bills for non-existent transactions, facilitating the fraudulent input tax credit claims across genuine and shell companies.

Regulatory authorities, including the Directorate General of GST Intelligence (DGGI), have uncovered several instances where syndicates employed layered transaction trails and fictitious suppliers to divert and siphon funds through systematic bogus invoicing. 

Major raids and investigations in cities such as Chennai and Belagavi have led to the arrest of key accused individuals, recovery of fake documents, freezing of bank accounts, and seizure of property documents linked to the scam. For example, one case in Belagavi revealed fake invoices totaling approximately ₹145 crore, leading to the arrest of an individual under the CGST Act.

This GST fraud network targets not just government revenue, but also paves the way for large multinational firms to benefit from inflated ITC, according to Enforcement Directorate findings. This cross-border and multi-entity approach compounds the scale and complexity of investigations, with dummy entities being used to link bogus invoices and move money through multiple shell companies across several states.

In response, the government has intensified compliance drives and implemented reforms, such as biometric Aadhaar authentication for GST registration in select states and more stringent registration checks. Authorities warn that unsuspecting individuals could have their PAN and Aadhaar details misused for fake GST registrations, making vigilance essential for both businesses and citizens. 

The ongoing investigations continue to unravel the extent of the network, highlighting the need for robust digital authentication, proactive monitoring, and inter-agency coordination to tackle these sophisticated financial crimes.

Unsecured Corporate Data Found Freely Accessible Through Simple Searches

 


An era when artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly becoming the backbone of modern business innovation is presenting a striking gap between awareness and action in a way that has been largely overlooked. In a recent study conducted by Sapio Research, it has been reported that while most organisations in Europe acknowledge the growing risks associated with AI adoption, only a small number have taken concrete steps towards reducing them.

Based on insights from 800 consumers and 375 finance decision-makers across the UK, Germany, France, and the Netherlands, the Finance Pulse 2024 report highlights a surprising paradox: 93 per cent of companies are aware that artificial intelligence poses a risk, yet only half have developed formal policies to regulate its responsible use. 

There was a significant number of respondents who expressed concern about data security (43%), followed closely by a concern about accountability, transparency, and the lack specialised skills to ensure a safe implementation (both of which reached 29%). In spite of this increased awareness, only 46% of companies currently maintain formal guidelines for the use of artificial intelligence in the workplace, and even fewer—48%—impose restrictions on the type of data that employees are permitted to feed into the systems. 

It has also been noted that just 38% of companies have implemented strict access controls to safeguard sensitive information. Speaking on the findings of this study, Andrew White, CEO and Co-Founder of Sapio Research, commented that even though artificial intelligence remains a high priority for investment across Europe, its rapid integration has left many employers confused about the use of this technology internally and ill-equipped to put in place the necessary governance frameworks.

It was found, in a recent investigation by cybersecurity consulting firm PromptArmor, that there had been a troubling lapse in digital security practices linked to the use of artificial intelligence-powered platforms. According to the firm's researchers, 22 widely used artificial intelligence applications—including Claude, Perplexity, and Vercel V0-had been examined by the firm's researchers, and highly confidential corporate information had been exposed on the internet by way of chatbot interfaces. 

There was an interesting collection of data found in the report, including access tokens for Amazon Web Services (AWS), internal court documents, Oracle salary reports that were explicitly marked as confidential, as well as a memo describing a venture capital firm's investment objectives. As detailed by PCMag, these researchers confirmed that anyone could easily access such sensitive material by entering a simple search query - "site:claude.ai + internal use only" - into any standard search engine, underscoring the fact that the use of unprotected AI integrations in the workplace is becoming a dangerous and unpredictable source of corporate data theft. 

A number of security researchers have long been investigating the vulnerabilities in popular AI chatbots. Recent findings have further strengthened the fragility of the technology's security posture. A vulnerability in ChatGPT has been resolved by OpenAI since August, which could have allowed threat actors to exploit a weakness in ChatGPT that could have allowed them to extract the users' email addresses through manipulation. 

In the same vein, experts at the Black Hat cybersecurity conference demonstrated how hackers could create malicious prompts within Google Calendar invitations by leveraging Google Gemini. Although Google resolved the issue before the conference, similar weaknesses were later found to exist in other AI platforms, such as Microsoft’s Copilot and Salesforce’s Einstein, even though they had been fixed by Google before the conference began.

Microsoft and Salesforce both issued patches in the middle of September, months after researchers reported the flaws in June. It is particularly noteworthy that these discoveries were made by ethical researchers rather than malicious hackers, which underscores the importance of responsible disclosure in safeguarding the integrity of artificial intelligence ecosystems. 

It is evident that, in addition to the security flaws of artificial intelligence, its operational shortcomings have begun to negatively impact organisations financially and reputationally. "AI hallucinations," or the phenomenon in which generative systems produce false or fabricated information with convincing accuracy, is one of the most concerning aspects of artificial intelligence. This type of incident has already had significant consequences for the lawyer involved, who was penalised for submitting a legal brief that was filled with over 20 fictitious court references produced by an artificial intelligence program. 

Deloitte also had to refund the Australian government six figures after submitting an artificial intelligence-assisted report that contained fabricated sources and inaccurate data. This highlighted the dangers of unchecked reliance on artificial intelligence for content generation and highlighted the risk associated with that. As a result of these issues, Stanford University’s Social Media Lab has coined the term “workslop” to describe AI-generated content that appears polished yet is lacking in substance. 

In the United States, 40% of full-time office employees reported that they encountered such material regularly, according to a study conducted. In my opinion, this trend demonstrates a growing disconnect between the supposed benefits of automation and the real efficiency can bring. When employees are spending hours correcting, rewriting, and verifying AI-generated material, the alleged benefits quickly fade away. 

Although what may begin as a convenience may turn out to be a liability, it can reduce production quality, drain resources, and in severe cases, expose companies to compliance violations and regulatory scrutiny. It is a fact that, as artificial intelligence continues to grow and integrate deeply into the digital and corporate ecosystems, it is bringing along with it a multitude of ethical and privacy challenges. 

In the wake of increasing reliance on AI-driven systems, long-standing concerns about unauthorised data collection, opaque processing practices, and algorithmic bias have been magnified, which has contributed to eroding public trust in technology. There is still the threat of unauthorised data usage on the part of many AI platforms, as they quietly collect and analyse user information without explicit consent or full transparency. Consequently, the threat of unauthorised data usage remains a serious concern. 

It is very common for individuals to be manipulated, profiled, and, in severe cases, to become the victims of identity theft as a result of this covert information extraction. Experts emphasise organisations must strengthen regulatory compliance by creating clear opt-in mechanisms, comprehensive deletion protocols, and transparent privacy disclosures that enable users to regain control of their personal information. 

In addition to these alarming concerns, biometric data has also been identified as a very important component of personal security, as it is the most intimate and immutable form of information a person has. Once compromised, biometric identifiers are unable to be replaced, making them prime targets for cybercriminals to exploit once they have been compromised. 

If such information is misused, whether through unauthorised surveillance or large-scale breaches, then it not only poses a greater risk of identity fraud but also raises profound questions regarding ethical and human rights issues. As a consequence of biometric leaks from public databases, citizens have been left vulnerable to long-term consequences that go beyond financial damage, because these systems remain fragile. 

There is also the issue of covert data collection methods embedded in AI systems, which allow them to harvest user information quietly without adequate disclosure, such as browser fingerprinting, behaviour tracking, and hidden cookies. utilising silent surveillance, companies risk losing user trust and being subject to potential regulatory penalties if they fail to comply with tightening data protection laws, such as GDPR. Microsoft and Salesforce both issued patches in the middle of September, months after researchers reported the flaws in June. 

It is particularly noteworthy that these discoveries were made by ethical researchers rather than malicious hackers, which underscores the importance of responsible disclosure in safeguarding the integrity of artificial intelligence ecosystems. It is evident that, in addition to the security flaws of artificial intelligence, its operational shortcomings have begun to negatively impact organisations financially and reputationally. 

"AI hallucinations," or the phenomenon in which generative systems produce false or fabricated information with convincing accuracy, is one of the most concerning aspects of artificial intelligence. This type of incident has already had significant consequences for the lawyer involved, who was penalised for submitting a legal brief that was filled with over 20 fictitious court references produced by an artificial intelligence program.

Deloitte also had to refund the Australian government six figures after submitting an artificial intelligence-assisted report that contained fabricated sources and inaccurate data. This highlighted the dangers of unchecked reliance on artificial intelligence for content generation, highlighted the risk associated with that. As a result of these issues, Stanford University’s Social Media Lab has coined the term “workslop” to describe AI-generated content that appears polished yet is lacking in substance. 

In the United States, 40% of full-time office employees reported that they encountered such material regularly, according to a study conducted. In my opinion, this trend demonstrates a growing disconnect between the supposed benefits of automation and the real efficiency it can bring. 

When employees are spending hours correcting, rewriting, and verifying AI-generated material, the alleged benefits quickly fade away. Although what may begin as a convenience may turn out to be a liability, it can reduce production quality, drain resources, and in severe cases, expose companies to compliance violations and regulatory scrutiny. 

It is a fact that, as artificial intelligence continues to grow and integrate deeply into the digital and corporate ecosystems, it is bringing along with it a multitude of ethical and privacy challenges. In the wake of increasing reliance on AI-driven systems, long-standing concerns about unauthorised data collection, opaque processing practices, and algorithmic bias have been magnified, which has contributed to eroding public trust in technology. 

There is still the threat of unauthorised data usage on the part of many AI platforms, as they quietly collect and analyse user information without explicit consent or full transparency. Consequently, the threat of unauthorised data usage remains a serious concern. It is very common for individuals to be manipulated, profiled, and, in severe cases, to become the victims of identity theft as a result of this covert information extraction. 

Experts emphasise that thatorganisationss must strengthen regulatory compliance by creating clear opt-in mechanisms, comprehensive deletion protocols, and transparent privacy disclosures that enable users to regain control of their personal information. In addition to these alarming concerns, biometric data has also been identified as a very important component of personal security, as it is the most intimate and immutable form of information a person has. 

Once compromised, biometric identifiers are unable to be replaced, making them prime targets for cybercriminals to exploit once they have been compromised. If such information is misused, whether through unauthorised surveillance or large-scale breaches, then it not oonly posesa greater risk of identity fraud but also raises profound questions regarding ethical and human rights issues. 

As a consequence of biometric leaks from public databases, citizens have been left vulnerable to long-term consequences that go beyond financial damage, because these systems remain fragile. There is also the issue of covert data collection methods embedded in AI systems, which allow them to harvest user information quietly without adequate disclosure, such as browser fingerprinting behaviourr tracking, and hidden cookies. 
By 
utilising silent surveillance, companies risk losing user trust and being subject to potential regulatory penalties if they fail to comply with tightening data protection laws, such as GDPR. Furthermore, the challenges extend further than privacy, further exposing the vulnerability of AI itself to ethical abuse. Algorithmic bias is becoming one of the most significant obstacles to fairness and accountability, with numerous examples having been shown to, be in f ,act contributing to discrimination, no matter how skewed the dataset. 

There are many examples of these biases in the real world - from hiring tools that unintentionally favour certain demographics to predictive policing systems which target marginalised communities disproportionately. In order to address these issues, we must maintain an ethical approach to AI development that is anchored in transparency, accountability, and inclusive governance to ensure technology enhances human progress while not compromising fundamental freedoms. 

In the age of artificial intelligence, it is imperative tthat hatorganisationss strike a balance between innovation and responsibility, as AI redefines the digital frontier. As we move forward, not only will we need to strengthen technical infrastructure, but we will also need to shift the culture toward ethics, transparency, and continual oversight to achieve this.

Investing in a secure AI infrastructure, educating employees about responsible usage, and adopting frameworks that emphasise privacy and accountability are all important for businesses to succeed in today's market. As an enterprise, if security and ethics are incorporated into the foundation of AI strategies rather than treated as a side note, today's vulnerabilities can be turned into tomorrow's competitive advantage – driving intelligent and trustworthy advancement.

Attackers Exploit Critical Windows Server Update Services Flaw After Microsoft’s Patch Fails

 

Cybersecurity researchers have warned that attackers are actively exploiting a severe vulnerability in Windows Server Update Services (WSUS), even after Microsoft’s recent patch failed to fully fix the issue. The flaw, tracked as CVE-2025-59287, impacts WSUS versions dating back to 2012.

Microsoft rolled out an emergency out-of-band security update for the vulnerability on Thursday, following earlier attempts to address it. Despite this, several cybersecurity firms reported active exploitation by Friday. However, Microsoft has not yet officially confirmed these attacks.

This situation highlights how quickly both cyber defenders and adversaries respond to newly disclosed flaws. Within hours of Microsoft’s emergency patch release, researchers observed proof-of-concept exploits and live attacks targeting vulnerable servers.

“This vulnerability shows how simple and trivial exploitation is once an attack script is publicly available,” said John Hammond, principal security researcher at Huntress, in an interview with CyberScoop. “It’s always an attack of opportunity — just kind of spray-and-pray, and see whatever access a criminal can get their hands on.”

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) added the flaw to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog, urging organizations to apply the latest patch and adhere to Microsoft’s mitigation steps.

A Microsoft spokesperson confirmed the re-release of the patch, explaining: “We re-released this CVE after identifying that the initial update did not fully mitigate the issue. Customers who have installed the latest updates are already protected.” Microsoft did not specify when or how it discovered that the previous patch was insufficient.

According to Shadowserver, over 2,800 instances of WSUS with open ports (8530 and 8531) are exposed to the internet — a necessary condition for exploitation. Approximately 28% of these vulnerable systems are located in the United States.

“Exploitation of this flaw is indiscriminate,” warned Ben Harris, founder and CEO of watchTowr. “If an unpatched Windows Server Update Services instance is online, at this stage it has likely already been compromised. This isn’t limited to low-risk environments — some of the affected entities are exactly the types of targets attackers prioritize.”

Huntress has observed five active attack cases linked to CVE-2025-59287. Hammond explained that these incidents mostly involve reconnaissance activities — such as environment mapping and data exfiltration — with no severe damage observed so far. However, he cautioned that WSUS operates with high-level privileges, meaning successful exploitation could fully compromise the affected server.

The risk, Hammond added, could escalate into supply chain attacks, where adversaries push malicious updates to connected systems. “Some potential supply-chain shenanigans just opening the door with this opportunity,” he said.

Experts from Palo Alto Networks’ Unit 42 echoed the concern. “By compromising this single server, an attacker can take over the entire patch distribution system,” said Justin Moore, senior manager of threat intel research at Unit 42. “With no authentication, they can gain system-level control and execute a devastating internal supply chain attack. They can push malware to every workstation and server in the organization, all disguised as a legitimate Microsoft update. This turns the trusted service into a weapon of mass distribution.”

Security researchers continue to emphasize that WSUS should never be exposed to the public internet, as attackers cannot exploit the flaw in instances that restrict external access.

Microsoft deprecated WSUS in September, stating that while it will still receive security support, it is no longer under active development or set to gain new features.

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