Palo Alto Networks Acknowledges SquareX Research on Limitations of SWGs Against Last Mile Reassembly Attacks
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9 Articles
Palo Alto Networks Acknowledges SquareX Research on Limitations of SWGs Against Last Mile Reassembly Attacks - Tech Startups
Palo Alto, California, 18th September 2025, CyberNewsWire The post Palo Alto Networks Acknowledges SquareX Research on Limitations of SWGs Against Last Mile Reassembly Attacks first appeared on Tech Startups.

Palo Alto Networks Acknowledges SquareX Research on Limitations of SWGs Against Last Mile Reassembly Attacks
PALO ALTO, Calif., Sept. 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- SquareX first discovered and disclosed Last Mile Reassembly attacks at DEF CON 32 last year,...
News alert: Palo Alto flags threats that evade Secure Web Gateways — echoing SquareX research
Palo Alto, Calif., Sept. 18, 2025, CyberNewswire: SquareX first discovered and disclosed Last Mile Reassembly attacks at DEF CON 32 last year, warning the security community of 20+ attacks that allow attackers to bypass all major SASE/SSE solutions and smuggle … (more…) The post News alert: Palo Alto flags threats that evade Secure Web Gateways — echoing SquareX research first appeared on The Last Watchdog. The post News alert: Palo Alto flags t…
Palo Alto Networks Acknowledges SquareX Research On Limitations Of SWGs Against Last Mile Reassembly Attacks - Cybernoz - Cybersecurity News
SquareX first discovered and disclosed Last Mile Reassembly attacks at DEF CON 32 last year, warning the security community of 20+ attacks that allow attackers to bypass all major SASE/SSE solutions and smuggle malware through the browser. Despite responsible disclosures to all major SASE/SSE providers, no vendor has made an official statement to warn its customers about the vulnerability in the past 13 months – until two weeks ago. As more att…
Palo Alto Networks acknowledges browser malware risks, validating SquareX’s LMR attack findings
SquareX’s research on Last Mile Reassembly (LMR) attacks, which the browser-native cybersecurity company disclosed at DEF CON 32, has finally received the validation it’s been waiting for. After more than a year of warning, Palo Alto Networks became the first major SASE vendor to publicly acknowledge that Secure Web Gateways (SWGs) can’t stop these evasive, browser-based malware attacks. In a blog post shared with CSO ahead of its publication on…
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