The Hertzbleed side-channel issue affects Intel and AMD processors. An Iranian spearphishing campaign prospected former Israeli officials. Patch Tuesday notes. A look at software bills of materials. Russia routes occupied Ukraine's Internet traffic through Russia. Intercepts in the hybrid war: the odd and the ugly. Deepen Desai from ZScaler joins us with the latest numbers on ransomware. Rob Boyce from Accenture Security looks at cyber invisibility. And, finally, criminal wannabes and criminal publicity stunts.\n\nFor links to all of today's stories check out our CyberWire daily news briefing:\nhttps://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/11/115\n\nSelected reading.\nA new vulnerability in Intel and AMD CPUs lets hackers steal encryption keys (Ars Technica)\xa0\nIranian Spear-Phishing Operation Targets Former Israeli and US High-Ranking Officials (Check Point Research)\nMicrosoft June 2022 Patch Tuesday fixes 1 zero-day, 55 flaws (BleepingComputer)\xa0\nMicrosoft Releases June 2022 Security Updates (CISA)\xa0\nWindows Updates Patch Actively Exploited 'Follina' Vulnerability (SecurityWeek)\xa0\nAdobe Plugs 46 Security Flaws on Patch Tuesday (SecurityWeek)\nCitrix Releases Security Updates for Application Delivery Management (CISA)\nSAP Releases June 2022 Security Updates (CISA)\xa0\nSo long, Internet Explorer. The browser retires today (AP NEWS)\nSBOM in Action: finding vulnerabilities with a Software Bill of Materials (Google Online Security Blog)\nRussia Is Taking Over Ukraine\u2019s Internet (Wired)\nBelarusian hacktivist group releases purported Belarusian wiretapped audio of Russian embassy (CyberScoop)\xa0\nIntercepted call: Russian plan to send PoWs out into minefields (The Telegraph)\xa0\nHacker Advertises \u2018Crappy\u2019 Ransomware on Instagram (Vice)\xa0\nLockBit Ransomware Compromise of Mandiant Not Supported by Any Evidence, May Be a PR Move by Cybercrime Gang (CPO Magazine)\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices