The Cyber Express Weekly Roundup: Dec 2025- Jan 2026

The Cyber Express Weekly Roundup: Dec 2025- Jan 2026

This week, The Cyber Express takes a closer look at the events shaping the global cybersecurity landscape as we transition from 2025 to 2026. Throughout this week, we covered new cybersecurity laws, insider jobs involving ransomware, AI-driven disinformation, and data protection enforcement.  

Coverage includes China’s updated cybersecurity law with stricter reporting and executive liability, Poland’s request for an EU investigation into TikTok’s AI-driven disinformation, and GDPR enforcement in France, with Nexpublica fined €1.7 million. 

Insider threats remain a concern, highlighted by U.S. BlackCat ransomware convictions, while global ransomware campaigns by groups like CL0P continue to exploit third-party software vulnerabilities.  

Here are the key stories from this week’s global cybersecurity landscape: 

The Cyber Express Weekly Roundup 

China’s New Cybersecurity Law: A Global Game-Changer 

As of January 1, 2026, China’s amended Cybersecurity Law has come into effect, representing the most significant update since 2017. The law drastically tightens reporting timelines, accountability, and enforcement, including near-real-time incident reporting for critical infrastructure operators—ranging from 60 minutes for severe incidents to four hours for major breaches. Read more…. 

TikTok Under the Microscope in Poland 

Poland has formally asked the European Commission to investigate TikTok over an AI-generated campaign promoting “Polexit,” the idea of Poland leaving the EU. Officials claim the platform failed to meet obligations under the Digital Services Act (DSA), putting democracy at risk, especially among younger users. Read more… 

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Insider Threats: BlackCat Ransomware in the U.S. 

In the United States, two cybersecurity professionals pleaded guilty to deploying ALPHV BlackCat ransomware against five companies, extorting over $1.2 million. The attackers exploited privileged access in healthcare, pharmaceutical, and tech sectors. Read more… 

GDPR Enforcement: Nexpublica Fined €1.7 Million 

France’s CNIL imposed a €1.7 million fine on Nexpublica France for failing to secure sensitive personal data in its PCRM system. A 2022 breach exposed information about disabilities and other personal details. CNIL emphasized that awareness of vulnerabilities without timely remediation constitutes a serious lapse in responsibility. Read more… 

CL0P Expands Ransomware Assault on Oracle EBS 

The CL0P ransomware group continued targeting Oracle E-Business Suite systems globally, affecting institutions like the University of Phoenix and Korean Air. Millions of employees’ and personal records were compromised, largely via third-party software vulnerabilities, underlining the risks of vendor dependencies in cybersecurity. Read more… 

MongoBleed and ASEAN: Trust as a Cyber Asset 

A critical MongoDB vulnerability, “MongoBleed” (CVE-2025-14847), allows attackers unauthenticated access to server memory, exposing credentials and confidential data. Meanwhile, a review of ASEAN cybersecurity in 2025 by Salleh Kodri, Sr Presales consultant, Cyble, found that brand abuse, executive impersonation, and digital reputation attacks caused more damage than traditional breaches. Read more… 

Governance and Corruption Spotlight: Georgia 

Former Georgian security chief Grigol Liluashvili was arrested on bribery and corruption charges involving energy contracts and public procurement. Prosecutors continue an active investigation into millions of dollars in illicit payments. Read more… 

Weekly Takeaway 

From AI-driven disinformation in Europe to insider ransomware attacks in the U.S., GDPR enforcement, and critical vulnerabilities worldwide, 2025 has underscored that cybersecurity is no longer just about technology. Protecting trust, brand integrity, and personal data is now as vital as firewalls and encryption; a lesson organizations must carry into 2026.



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