Thursday, May 15, 2025
HomeSecurity NewsMore than 75% of Redis Servers Open to Internet are Infected With...

More than 75% of Redis Servers Open to Internet are Infected With Malware

Published on

SIEM as a Service

Follow Us on Google News

New Imperva research report shows more than 75% of Open Redis servers are having the signs of malware infection.

The new crypto-mining attack dubbed RedisWannaMine was initially observed earlier last month targeting Windows Server, Apache Solr, and Redis servers.

More and More Attack on Redis Servers

Attackers compromised the outdated version Redis versions with exploit CVE-2017-9805 and drop ReddisWannaMine that installs cryptocurrency miner.

- Advertisement - Google News

Imperva sayswe’ve been hearing about more and more attacks on Redis servers”. To determine the significance of the attack researchers deployed a radius server based honeypot and within 24hours the servers registered the first attack.

Attackers set up a value key/ value pair in the memory and save it to the disk and force the file to run and download the file from external source. Imperva noticed the same key/ value pair on multiple servers which are a clear sign of botnet activity.

Also Read Best Way to Accelerate and Secure Your Website From Top Common Web Threats

72K Open Redis servers

According to Shodan Query over port:6379 there are over 73,000 Redis servers were open to the Internet, which allows untrusted clients to access the Redis server.

Redis servers

According to the Imperva scan results, most of the server found to be infected with the malware “more than two-thirds of the open Redis servers contain malicious keys and three-quarters of the servers contain malicious values, suggesting that the server is infected.”

Redis servers
Redis servers

The Redis based honeypot exposed by Imperva target by a medium-sized botnet located at China (86% of IPs). The attacks included SQL injection, cross-site scripting, the malicious file uploads, remote code executions etc.

“We often see issues arise when people don’t read the documentation and migrate services to the cloud, without being aware of the consequences or the adequate measures that are needed to do so.”

Mitigations

  • Don’t expose the Redis instance directly to the internet.
  • Apply Authentication if possible.
  • Don’t store sensitive data in clear text.
  • Check the CPU usage and key values for infection.
  • Make sure you run Redis with the minimal privileges necessary.
Gurubaran
Gurubaran
Gurubaran is a co-founder of Cyber Security News and GBHackers On Security. He has 10+ years of experience as a Security Consultant, Editor, and Analyst in cybersecurity, technology, and communications.

Latest articles

Critical BitLocker Flaw Exploited in Minutes: Bitpixie Vulnerability Proof of Concept Unveiled

Security researchers have demonstrated a non-invasive method to bypass Microsoft BitLocker encryption on Windows...

Google Chrome Zero-Day Vulnerability (CVE-2025-4664) Actively Exploited in The Wild

Google has rolled out a fresh Stable Channel update for the Chrome browser across...

Threat Actors Leverage Weaponized HTML Files to Deliver Horabot Malware

A recent discovery by FortiGuard Labs has unveiled a cunning phishing campaign orchestrated by...

TA406 Hackers Target Government Entities to Steal Login Credentials

The North Korean state-sponsored threat actor TA406, also tracked as Opal Sleet and Konni,...

Resilience at Scale

Why Application Security is Non-Negotiable

The resilience of your digital infrastructure directly impacts your ability to scale. And yet, application security remains a critical weak link for most organizations.

Application Security is no longer just a defensive play—it’s the cornerstone of cyber resilience and sustainable growth. In this webinar, Karthik Krishnamoorthy (CTO of Indusface) and Phani Deepak Akella (VP of Marketing – Indusface), will share how AI-powered application security can help organizations build resilience by

Discussion points


Protecting at internet scale using AI and behavioral-based DDoS & bot mitigation.
Autonomously discovering external assets and remediating vulnerabilities within 72 hours, enabling secure, confident scaling.
Ensuring 100% application availability through platforms architected for failure resilience.
Eliminating silos with real-time correlation between attack surface and active threats for rapid, accurate mitigation

More like this

Phishing Campaign Uses Blob URLs to Bypass Email Security and Avoid Detection

Cybersecurity researchers at Cofense Intelligence have identified a sophisticated phishing tactic leveraging Blob URIs...

UK Government to Shift Away from Passwords in New Security Move

UK government has unveiled plans to implement passkey technology across its digital services later...

New Spam Campaign Leverages Remote Monitoring Tools to Exploit Organizations

A sophisticated spam campaign targeting Portuguese-speaking users in Brazil has been uncovered by Cisco...