The malware's creators insist a new open source version of Neptune is for educational use by pen testers, but a raft of sophisticated backdoor and evasion capabilities says otherwise.
Neither security issue requires user interaction, and one of the vulnerabilities was used to unlock a student activist's device in an attempt to install spyware.
Healthcare and IT security practitioners worry some of the proposed amendments are not practical for a sector that lacks resources and often uses legacy equipment.
No-code and low-code platforms offer undeniable benefits. But when security is an afterthought, organizations risk deploying vulnerable applications that expose sensitive data and critical systems.