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May 26th, 2026

Knowledge

CERT-In’s 12-hour patching guidance raises the bar for AI-era platform operations

The Hacker News reported on 26 May 2026 that India’s CERT-In is recommending 12-hour patching for internet-facing flaws amid AI-assisted attacks. For Bubbll, the lesson is to treat patch speed, asset inventory and escalation as customer-trust infrastructure.

CERT-In’s 12-hour patching guidance raises the bar for AI-era platform operations

CERT-In’s 12-hour patching guidance raises the bar for AI-era platform operations

The Hacker News reported on 26 May 2026 that India’s CERT-In is recommending a 12-hour patching target for internet-facing vulnerabilities as AI-assisted attacks compress the time between disclosure, weaponization and exploitation. The report cites CERT-In’s warning that AI tools can help attackers automate discovery and exploitation across exposed services, weak identities, insecure APIs and misconfigured systems.

For operators, the practical message is not only “patch faster.” It is to maintain a live inventory of public surfaces, know which flaws affect customer-facing workflows, and predefine who can approve emergency maintenance when a high-risk advisory lands.

Why it matters for Bubbll

Bubbll’s chat, CRM, commerce and hospitality surfaces will be judged by how quickly the platform can protect customer conversations and transactions. A good trust posture needs dependency monitoring, internet-facing asset maps, emergency patch windows, and clear Thai/English customer communications when risk is material.

Sources

Image: “Cybersecurity” by jaydeep / Pixabay, dedicated to the public domain under CC0 1.0 via Wikimedia Commons._

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