A reflected cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability in PHP-Fusion 7.02.07 allows remote attackers to inject arbitrary web script or HTML via the status parameter in the CMS admin panel.
All posts by rocco
Tenable’s Acquisition Of Cymptom: An “Attack Path-Informed” Approach to Cybersecurity
Tenable’s recent acquisitions all had the same overarching goal: helping our customers gain better security insights across their cyberattack surface.
At our investor day in December 2021, Tenable CEO Amit Yoran and I outlined the vision of where we see Tenable and the vulnerability management market heading over the next few years. We focused on three main areas:
the need to extend vulnerability management (VM) everywhere;
the need to shift security left; and
the need to transform into a cyber data analytics platform.
To extend VM everywhere, we’ve aligned IT and critical infrastructure security through the acquisition of Indegy in 2019, predicting the capabilities and controls would converge. We took a giant leap forward when we acquired Alsid to help our customers understand the Active Directory flaws attackers will leverage to elevate privileges and laterally move once they’ve gained a foothold. Indeed, in a zero trust world, identity and access may still remain our most critical “vulnerability”
Late last year, we acquired Accurics to enable our customers to “shift left” to better understand security issues in Infrastructure as Code before they are deployed and to improve visibility of the running cloud. The importance of this visibility was demonstrated when Log4Shell was disclosed in December, causing cybersecurity teams everywhere to try and quickly understand how vulnerable they were to this black swan issue. In a world where cloud native applications change at the speed of code, security must move closer to the developers.
The three acquisitions we’ve made in the last three years, and the product enhancements we subsequently released, all had the same overarching goal of helping our customers gain better security insights across their cyberattack surface. The next step is to understand how vulnerabilities can create attack pathways leading to breach to help security teams effectively prioritize those issues that matter most and guide them on preemptively addressing those flaws before they are leveraged. We see attack path analysis to be for preventive cybersecurity what event correlation and analytics have become for the SIEM and XDR.
Enabling our customers to preemptively disrupt attack paths with the cyber data and analytics we provide leads us to the acquisition of Cymptom, which closed today. Founded in 2019, Cymptom has been focused on visually mapping out attack paths and prioritizing choke points that can be mitigated or remediated to reduce risk according to the MITRE ATT&CK framework.
Connecting the attack steps across everything with an IP address or running code in a unified platform is the only way security teams will be able to preemptively and effectively defend against the modern style of breaches we see today. Attackers don’t differentiate between web application mishaps, forgotten software patches, Active Directory accidents or misconfigured clouds, so why should defenders?
As we integrate Cymptom’s technology, research and expertise, Tenable’s solutions will become “attack path informed” to give our customers the insights they need to proactively reduce the probability of a breach with the least amount of effort. Our customers will be able to interact with our threat, vulnerability and exposure data in ways they’ve never been able to before. For the first time able to see the assets they protect from the viewpoint of a potential attacker, and the probable steps they’d take once an initial entrypoint has been found.
We’re incredibly thrilled to have Cymptom join Tenable and I can’t wait to work with our teams to integrate their innovative approaches to help our customers to see the steps attackers could take and prioritize preemptive action to turn attacks into attempts.
Learn more:
Attend the webinar: Tenable and Cymptom: Predict and Disrupt Attack Paths
Visit the landing page: Tenable Acquires Attack Path Visualization Company Cymptom
SEC Consult SA-20220215 :: Multiple Critical Vulnerabilities in multiple Zyxel devices
Posted by SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab, Research via Fulldisclosure on Feb 16
SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab Security Advisory < 20220215-0 >
=======================================================================
title: Multiple Critical Vulnerabilities
product: Multiple Zyxel devices
vulnerable version: For affected products see “Solution” section
fixed version: see “Solution” section
CVE number: –
impact: Critical
homepage:…
Trojan-Spy.Win32.Zbot.aawo.Zeus-Builder / Insecure Permissions
Posted by malvuln on Feb 16
Discovery / credits: Malvuln – malvuln.com (c) 2022
Original source:
https://malvuln.com/advisory/fe0dacbc953d4301232b386fcb3afc23.txt
Contact: malvuln13 () gmail com
Media: twitter.com/malvuln
Threat: Trojan-Spy.Win32.Zbot.aawo.Zeus-Builder
Vulnerability: Insecure Permissions
Description: ZeuS Builder saves PE files to the c drive with insecure
permissions granting change (C) permissions to the authenticated user
group. Standard users can…
Backdoor.Win32.Prosti.b / Insecure Permissions
Posted by malvuln on Feb 16
Discovery / credits: Malvuln – malvuln.com (c) 2022
Original source:
https://malvuln.com/advisory/8201ba6b542fc91c004110b2fc5395aa.txt
Contact: malvuln13 () gmail com
Media: twitter.com/malvuln
Threat: Backdoor.Win32.Prosti.b
Vulnerability: Insecure Permissions
Description: The malware writes a “.dll” PE file with insecure permissions
under c drive granting change (C) permissions to the authenticated user
group. Standard users can…
Email-Worm.Win32.Lama / Insecure Permissions
Posted by malvuln on Feb 16
Discovery / credits: Malvuln – malvuln.com (c) 2022
Original source:
https://malvuln.com/advisory/1c255ef6fd44877700867f94a59875d2.txt
Contact: malvuln13 () gmail com
Media: twitter.com/malvuln
Threat: Email-Worm.Win32.Lama
Vulnerability: Insecure Permissions
Description: The malware writes a “.BAT” file with insecure permissions
under c drive granting change (C) permissions to the authenticated user
group. Standard users can rename…
Backdoor.Win32.Prorat.lkt / Weak Hardcoded Password
Posted by malvuln on Feb 16
Discovery / credits: Malvuln – malvuln.com (c) 2022
Original source:
https://malvuln.com/advisory/65a53a37843db2b86a67a9e23277c1bf.txt
Contact: malvuln13 () gmail com
Media: twitter.com/malvuln
Threat: Backdoor.Win32.Prorat.lkt
Vulnerability: Weak Hardcoded Password
Description: The malware listens on TCP port 2121. Authentication is
required, however the password “special” is weak and hardcoded in cleartext
at offset 0040267C.
Type:…
Drupal core – Moderately critical – Information disclosure – SA-CORE-2022-004
The Quick Edit module does not properly check entity access in some circumstances. This could result in users with the “access in-place editing” permission viewing some content they are are not authorized to access.
Sites are only affected if the QuickEdit module (which comes with the Standard profile) is installed.
Also see Quick Edit – Moderately critical – Information disclosure – SA-CONTRIB-2022-025 which addresses the same vulnerability for the contributed module.
This advisory is not covered by Drupal Steward.
Install the latest version:
If you are using Drupal 9.3, update to Drupal 9.3.6.
If you are using Drupal 9.2, update to Drupal 9.2.13.
All versions of Drupal 9 prior to 9.2.x are end-of-life and do not receive security coverage. Note that Drupal 8 has reached its end of life.
Drupal 7 core does not include the QuickEdit module and therefore is not affected.
Uninstalling the QuickEdit module will also mitigate the vulnerability. Site owners may wish to consider this option as the QuickEdit module will be removed from core in Drupal 10.
xjm of the Drupal Security Team
Alex Bronstein of the Drupal Security Team
Adam G-H
Drew Webber of the Drupal Security Team
Wim Leers
Ted Bowman
Dave Long
Derek Wright
Lee Rowlands of the Drupal Security Team
Samuel Mortenson
Joseph Zhao
Drupal core – Moderately critical – Improper input validation – SA-CORE-2022-003
Drupal core’s form API has a vulnerability where certain contributed or custom modules’ forms may be vulnerable to improper input validation. This could allow an attacker to inject disallowed values or overwrite data. Affected forms are uncommon, but in certain cases an attacker could alter critical or sensitive data.
This advisory is not covered by Drupal Steward.
Install the latest version:
If you are using Drupal 9.3, update to Drupal 9.3.6.
If you are using Drupal 9.2, update to Drupal 9.2.13.
If you are using Drupal 7, update to Drupal 7.88.
All versions of Drupal 9 prior to 9.2.x are end-of-life and do not receive security coverage. Note that Drupal 8 has reached its end of life.
Lee Rowlands of the Drupal Security Team
Ben Dougherty of the Drupal Security Team
Drew Webber of the Drupal Security Team
Jen Lampton
Nate Lampton
Fabian Franz
Alex Bronstein of the Drupal Security Team
ZDI-22-377: Apple macOS libFontParser TTF Font Parsing Out-Of-Bounds Write Remote Code Execution Vulnerability
This vulnerability allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary code on affected installations of Apple macOS. Interaction with the libFontParser library is required to exploit this vulnerability but attack vectors may vary depending on the implementation.