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March Patch Tuesday Minimal Risks Highlight Shadow AI Threats

Security leaders urged to prioritize internal AI audits over low-impact vulnerabilities as Microsoft releases a quiet monthly update.

The March Patch Tuesday cycle has arrived with a notable absence of zero-day vulnerabilities or critical threats requiring emergency action. Despite industry chatter surrounding CVE-2026-26118, the update reveals a low-risk landscape that experts say should shift the focus of Chief Security Officers (CSOs) toward the uncontrolled use of artificial intelligence within their networks.

Tyler Reguly, associate director of security R&D at Fortra, characterized the current cycle as "remarkably low-stress." Reguly noted that while some may attempt to label recent disclosures as zero-days, the technical reality does not support the panic.

"The reality is that there’s an update available, this was never publicly disclosed, and Microsoft lists exploitation as less likely," Reguly said. "Instead of worrying about a single CVE that we don’t really need to talk about, look at your organization's AI policy, look at your tooling, and look at how your data is flowing."

Reguly warned that "shadow AI"—the unauthorized deployment of AI tools by employees—poses a more persistent threat to data integrity than the vulnerabilities patched this month.

The March release includes 83 Microsoft CVEs and 10 non-Microsoft CVEs. Among the publicly disclosed flaws are CVE-2026-21262, a privilege escalation in SQL Server, and CVE-2026-26127, a .NET denial of service. Security analysts have dismissed both as "nothingburgers," noting that the SQL Server flaw requires an attacker to already possess authenticated access.

The highest-rated vulnerability, CVE-2026-21536, carries a 9.8 CVSS score but requires no customer action as Microsoft has already applied the update to the affected Devices Pricing Program.

The most significant technical hurdle for IT departments involves the Azure ecosystem. Vulnerabilities such as CVE-2026-23665, affecting Azure Linux Virtual Machines, and several flaws in Azure IoT Explorer, require non-standard patching mechanisms.

Reguly pointed to an "immature" patching process within cloud ecosystems as a point of concern.

"The cloud ecosystem doesn’t really handle patching well," Reguly said. "CSOs should ensure they have solid asset inventories around the deployment of cloud-related systems and tools, so that admins know where these things exist and when they need to be fixed."

The consensus for March is to maintain standard testing cycles and avoid rushed deployments, as no current vulnerabilities necessitate an accelerated response.

About the Author

Jesse Jacobs is assistant editor of SecurityToday.com.

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