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Pwn2Own Berlin 2026, Day Three: DEVCORE Crowned Master of Pwn, $1.298 Million Total

Pierluigi Paganini
May 17, 2026

Pwn2Own Berlin 2026 ended with 47 zero-days and $1.29M in payouts, as DEVCORE dominated the competition across all categories.

Pwn2Own Berlin 2026 ended after three intense days, with participants discovering 47 unique zero-days, and earning $1,298,250 in total payouts. Pwn2Own Berlin 2026 wrapped up at OffensiveCon on Saturday with a final day that sealed DEVCORE’s dominance across every metric that matters.

Going into day three, DEVCORE held a commanding lead with 40.5 Master of Pwn points and $405,000, a gap that most competitors could not realistically close in a single day. But the final schedule still had serious targets on it, including Microsoft SharePoint, VMware ESXi, and further attempts against Windows 11, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, and OpenAI Codex. Plenty of room for the scoreboard to shift, and plenty of incentive for researchers who had been waiting for the right moment.

One of the most significant results of the day came from splitline of the DEVCORE Research Team, who chained two bugs together to successfully exploit Microsoft SharePoint, collecting $100,000 and 10 Master of Pwn points in the process. SharePoint had survived a failed attempt by Rapid7’s Stephen Fewer on day two, making this a vindication of sorts for a target that had initially looked like it might escape the competition unscathed. Two bugs, one successful chain, and another Microsoft server product joins the list of things that got compromised in Berlin this week.

That result alone was enough to make the final outcome mathematically settled. DEVCORE finished the three-day competition with 50.5 Master of Pwn points and $505,000, a performance with no precedent in recent editions of the contest. STARLabs SG came in second place with 25 points and $242,500, followed by Out Of Bounds in third with 12.75 points and $95,750.

The researchers Nguyen Hoang Thach (@hi_im_d4rkn3ss) of STARLabs SG (@starlabs_sg) exploited a Memory Corruption bug to target VMware ESXi with the Cross-tenant Code Execution add-on, earning $200,000 and 20 Master of Pwn points.

OpenAI’s Codex coding agent, already compromised twice on day one, took another hit on the final day. Satoki Tsuji of Ikotas Labs abused an external control vulnerability to exploit the platform and demonstrate code execution, earning $20,000 and 4 Master of Pwn points. Codex was successfully exploited three separate times across the competition by three different researchers, a pattern that should prompt serious reflection inside OpenAI’s security organization. Each exploit used a different technique, meaning the attack surface is not a single narrow flaw but something broader.

Anthropic’s Claude Code, which was on the schedule as a target, was approached by Compass Security, who had already collected $40,000 for hacking OpenAI Codex on day one. Their Claude Code attempt hit a one-vulnerability collision with a previous entry, earning $20,000 and 2 Master of Pwn points rather than a full win.

A collision means part of what they found was already known from a prior submission — frustrating, but still a partial result that confirms working research was in hand.

The pattern that defined the entire competition continued on the final day. Viettel Cyber Security’s Le Tran Hai Tung, dungnm, and hieuvd used an integer overflow to escalate privileges on a fully patched Windows 11 machine in the fifth round, adding $7,500 and 3 Master of Pwn points to their tally. Windows 11 was exploited successfully multiple times across all three days by multiple independent teams, each using a different vulnerability. By the end of the competition it had become one of the most-targeted and most-compromised systems in Berlin.

Red Hat Enterprise Linux for Workstations also continued to absorb hits. Sina Kheirkhah of Summoning Team used two bugs to exploit the platform, though one was a previously known issue, landing him in partial-credit territory at $7,000 and 1.5 Master of Pwn points. Hyunwoo Kim separately chained a use-after-free and an uninitialized memory bug for a clean privilege escalation win on the same platform, earning $5,000 and 2 Master of Pwn points.

Vendors now have 90 days to release fixes before technical details become public.

Last year’s Berlin edition paid out $1,078,750. This year crossed $1.298 million, a 20 percent increase, with eight more unique vulnerabilities discovered. The growth in both numbers reflects something real: more researchers are participating, targets are diversifying well beyond traditional browsers and operating systems into AI infrastructure and developer tooling, and the economics of vulnerability research at this level continue to attract serious talent.

DEVCORE’s dominance this year was total. That is not luck. That is a research program operating at a consistently high level across an entire week of competition.

The complete list of results of Pwn2Own Berlin 2026 Day Three is available here.

Follow me on Twitter: @securityaffairs and Facebook and Mastodon

Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, Pwn2Own Berlin 2026)







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I love having an Amazon Fire TV Stick, but the lag used to be a real problem. Initially, it felt like a great purchase because of the convenience and value, but over time, every click of the remote felt slower. The home screen felt heavy, menus lagged behind input, and trying to jump between Netflix and Disney+ was a test of my patience.

Luckily, Amazon has finally acknowledged this and rebuilt the interface from the ground up. For the first time in six years, we see performance, not pretty pictures, receive the focus.

The first major overhaul in over five years

Amazon rebuilt the interface from scratch

For the first time since 2020, Amazon pushed a significant technical and visual change to the Fire TV interface. Its development teams rebuilt the entire underlying code stack to focus on making it efficient and modern. The interface now operates 20% to 30% faster across supported devices.

We have seen other updates, but they tend to be smaller and not as significant. For example, most of the updates added a feature, or just removed major bugs and kept the system running. When you refresh an entire OS like this, it is a big deal. It is something the company did for free, and it didn’t have to push it to all its devices.

One of the ways that I think Amazon beats Roku is with speed. Roku is very slow with its response times, despite being a good option to use. When I press the navigation pad in the middle of the Fire TV remote, the response is quick. That same action on Roku means a noticeable half-second wait.

I’ve also noticed that Roku tends to mess up my pins if I put them in too fast, but Amazon won’t have that issue at all. So having a new update that focuses on increasing that speed and efficiency just makes the company more appealing.

This backend work makes navigation faster, tab switching instant, and interactions smooth. It basically stops the slow feeling that older Fire TV hardware had. Now it is time for Roku to take notice and do the same thing. Fire TV has a much better interface and is now significantly faster, so the competition has to step up.

Noticeable speed gains and better organization

Other than the speed improvements, the home screen’s structure has gotten a significant and necessary cleanup. In previous versions of Fire OS, you were limited to just six pinned apps in your favorites, so you usually had to go through sub-menus and crowded rows to open other streaming services. Now, the redesigned interface lets you pin up to 20 of your most used apps directly to the home screen.

By using smaller, rounded app icons, the layout fits these extra shortcuts without looking too busy, so your essential subscriptions are easy to get to. Also, core navigation has been moved to the top of the screen with clear tabs for Movies, TV Shows, Sports, News, and Live TV. This structural shift makes it much easier to hop between services, since it groups recommendations by what you want to watch instead of making you open separate apps to see what’s available.

A major feature in this redesign is the addition of Alexa Plus, which changes how you search for content significantly. Instead of scrolling or typing movie titles exactly, the new AI assistant handles natural language requests well.

You can now rely on Alexa Plus to find movies based on specific moods, themes, or genres, like asking for a “gritty sci-fi” film or looking for “sci-fi movies with alien invasions.” That’s the kind of thing that feels like it should have been easy for the AI to do, but now it can do this just fine.

You can also ask follow-up questions to adjust your search, ask about the actors currently on your screen, or even tell the TV to go straight to well-known scenes in a movie. I’ve never liked the AI that gets added in because it feels useless when you want it to act like a real assistant, like describing movies, so it’s a welcome addition.

The limited release and expected timeline

Most users will get the update this spring

A Fire TV color TV getting an upgrade Credit: Amazon

While the massive visual overhaul and performance boosts coming to Amazon’s streaming devices are great to hear about, it isn’t guaranteed for everyone soon. There are many users who are still waiting for the “Update Available” notification to pop up on their devices. The thing to remember is that major software updates usually need a phased rollout. This is especially true for those who completely rebuild the underlying code to boost operational speeds by up to thirty percent.

Amazon officially began the rollout of this update in February 2026. However, instead of pushing the massive visual and technical overhaul to the tens of millions of active Fire TV users worldwide all at once, the company made the smarter move. By phasing it, the company can react to bugs or glitches and stop the update if it causes any damage to its services. This is about being safe.

The initial February 2026 release is currently restricted to newer hardware like the Fire TV Stick 4K Plus, the Fire TV Stick 4K Max (2nd Gen), and the premium Fire TV Omni Mini-LED Series televisions. Also, the newly launched Amazon Ember Artline is included in this first wave of devices showing off the new user interface straight out of the box. This is a lifestyle television that doubles as an ambient digital art canvas.

This way, Amazon can carefully monitor how the overhauled Fire OS and the Alexa+ generative AI features work in the wild before pushing the demanding new software to older or less powerful processors. From how things are looking, you should get your new upgrade soon.

If you own an older stick or a TV from partner brands like Hisense, the software is slated to arrive as a free download during a broader release throughout the spring of 2026.


The biggest upgrade is finally here

Amazon’s decision to completely rebuild the underlying code stack feels like a big win for the company. It’s the kind of thing that makes a service feel new and will stick in the minds of users the next time they need a new TV. I love my Roku, but it is difficult to argue against a snappier and more efficient Amazon Fire OS. It’s a great example of how the foundational code is much better than doing more visually.​​​​​​​

fire tv omni

Display Size

55 inches

Dimensions

48.3” x 28.2” x 2.7”

Operating System

FireOS




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