0day And Hitlist Week 01102024 Work May 2026
As the cybersecurity community turned its calendar to the fourth quarter of 2024, the week of October 1st (designated in our logs as ) began with a cacophony of alert sirens. For blue teams, vulnerability management staff, and threat hunters, the keyword combination of "0day and hitlist" defined the operational tempo.
This week was not about theoretical risks. It was about active work —specifically, the work required to identify, validate, and mitigate previously unknown vulnerabilities (0days) while simultaneously defending against adversaries who publish explicit "hitlists" of targets. 0day and hitlist week 01102024 work
The Hitlist Connection: This 0day was immediately added to several hitlists targeting US healthcare providers still running legacy ERP portals. As the cybersecurity community turned its calendar to
The first 0day of the week was reported by Microsoft's Threat Intelligence Center (MSTIC) on October 2nd. Exploitation chains observed in the wild used a malicious printer driver to escape Low Integrity Level sandboxes. The key nuance? This 0day bypassed Patch Tuesday’s August mitigations for a related bug (CVE-2024-38124). It was about active work —specifically, the work
Date: October 6, 2024 Author: Threat Intelligence Desk
Traditionally, an attacker finds a target, then finds an exploit. In week 01102024, the pattern reversed. Attackers obtained a (a set of high-value targets), then specifically searched for 0days that were present in the tech stacks of those targets.