The nightmare isn’t the hospital — it’s the cute devil girl who won’t let you leave.
Made with Combos — no code, playable in minutes.
Next: horror game with puzzles, endings, and boss encounters?
Microsoft and security researcher Nightmare Eclipse are in a public fight over how security flaws should be handled.
Over recent weeks, Nightmare Eclipse posted working exploit code online for several serious Windows bugs before Microsoft released fixes.
The flaws affect major Windows security features like Microsoft Defender and BitLocker.
The researcher says they first reported the problems privately but claims Microsoft ignored the reports, delayed responses, and shut down their bug reporting account. They then published the details and proof-of-concept code publicly.
On May 27, Microsoft responded in a blog post, saying that releasing exploit code before patches are ready puts users at risk because attackers can immediately use it.
Microsoft also warned it would continue legal action against those enabling cybercrime like Eclipse
Nightmare Eclipse argues they went public because of slow fixes and poor treatment from Microsoft in the past.
Security researcher Nightmare Eclipse, who has shared several zero-day vulnerabilities, had their entire GitHub account and all repositories taken down.
They have now moved everything to a new GitLab profile at
In a signed message on their blog, they accuse Microsoft of defaming them, mishandling vulnerability reports like CVE-2026-45585, revoking their MSRC access, and quietly patching issues without collaborating.
They point to July 14 as an important date when they may release more documents or take things further.
The post also mentions two other vulnerabilities called UnDefend (CVE-2026-45498) and RedSun (CVE-2026-41091).
i dont usually get nightmares, from my vague sense my dreams are pretty consistently pleasant. i think this might mean i have a fundamentally well-adjusted psyche. and all the other stuff is cruft on top. i'm Normal