Microsoft’s July Patch Tuesday Shatters All Records
Microsoft dropped a bombshell this week. The company released security updates covering at least 570 vulnerabilities — nearly triple what it fixed in last month’s already record-breaking Patch Tuesday. That’s not a typo. Fifty-seven zero-zero.
The sheer scale is unprecedented. Microsoft attributes this explosion in patch counts directly to artificial intelligence. Pavan Davuluri, Microsoft’s Executive Vice President, wrote on July 9 that Windows users should expect “a higher volume of security updates” going forward. AI, he explained, is now finding more bugs, faster, across more code than ever before.
60 Critical Bugs and 3 Zero-Days Under Active Attack
Nearly 60 of the flaws fixed this month carry a “critical” severity rating. That means attackers or malware can remotely take over a Windows device with minimal user interaction. It gets worse: Microsoft addressed three zero-day vulnerabilities, two of which are already being exploited in the wild.
Two of those zero-days let an attacker elevate their privileges on a Windows system. They are CVE-2026-56155, an Active Directory Federation Services bug, and CVE-2026-56164, a Microsoft SharePoint vulnerability. The third zero-day, CVE-2026-50661, is a BitLocker security feature bypass. Microsoft says this one has been publicly detailed but isn’t yet actively exploited. If an attacker gets physical access to your device, they could potentially read your encrypted data.
250 Elevation-of-Privilege Flaws: A Troubling Pattern
Here’s a number that should make any security team sit up straight: roughly 250 of this month’s patches fix elevation-of-privilege (EoP) vulnerabilities. That’s nearly half of all the bugs Microsoft is squashing.
EoP flaws are especially dangerous because they turn a limited user account into an administrator. Once an attacker has admin rights, they can install malware, steal data, or move laterally across a network. The sheer volume suggests that either Microsoft’s codebase has systemic privilege-escalation issues, or AI is surfacing problems that were invisible before. Probably both.
Copilot Bug Scores 9.6 — and It’s Remote Code Execution
Perhaps the most eye-catching single vulnerability this month is CVE-2026-48561, a remote code execution flaw in Microsoft Copilot. It carries a CVSS score of 9.6 — nearly perfect severity. Jack Bicer, director of vulnerability research at Action1, highlighted the risk: an unauthorized attacker can execute code over the network simply by hosting a malicious website. When a user visits that site using Microsoft Edge for Android, the browser automatically sends crafted prompts to Copilot. No user interaction required beyond the visit.
That’s alarming for anyone using Copilot on mobile. Microsoft’s own exploitability index initially rated this bug as “less likely” to be exploited. But security researchers aren’t buying it.
AI Is Changing the Game — But So Are Attackers
Satnam Narang, senior staff research engineer at Tenable, argues that Microsoft’s exploitability index is becoming dangerously outdated. The system was designed around human attackers. Now AI tools can generate working exploits in minutes.
Narang pointed to research from Anthropic’s Red Team. Their Mythos Preview model produced proof-of-concept exploits for 13 out of 14 vulnerabilities that Microsoft had rated “Exploitation Less Likely” or “Exploitation Unlikely.” That’s a 93% success rate on bugs the company considered low-risk.
“Our way of looking at Patch Tuesday has changed,” Narang said. “The exploitability index is centered around humans, not AI tools. As these tools continue to improve, defense needs to improve alongside it.”
His point is stark: if AI can weaponize supposedly “unlikely” vulnerabilities in minutes, Microsoft’s ratings are essentially meaningless. The company added CVE-2026-56164, the SharePoint zero-day, to CISA’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities list on July 1 — after initially calling it “less likely” to be exploited.
Other Vendors Are Also Ramping Up Patch Volume
Microsoft isn’t alone in this surge. Chris Goettl at Ivanti noted that Adobe, Cisco, Mozilla, and Oracle are all shipping updates more frequently. Adobe announced it’s moving to twice-monthly security bulletins, also citing AI for accelerating its patch cycles. Google’s patch batches in June 2026 totaled more than 900 security fixes.
The industry is clearly in a new era. AI is helping find vulnerabilities at machine speed. But it’s also helping attackers weaponize them just as fast. The old monthly patch cycle was designed for a slower world. That world is gone.
Should You Patch Immediately or Wait?
Here’s the practical dilemma. With 570 fixes, the odds of a patch causing system instability are higher than usual. Microsoft’s own history shows that large patch batches sometimes break things. Windows backup best practices are always a good idea before applying updates. For end users, waiting a few days to let early adopters discover any issues might be wise. For IT administrators, the calculus is different: two actively exploited zero-days mean the risk of not patching is real.
Either way, July 2026 will be remembered as the month Microsoft patched more vulnerabilities than ever before — and signaled that this is the new normal.