Saturday, May 18, 2024

DHS Urges US govt agencies to Update SolarWinds Orion Software

The recent SolarWinds hack has left several companies and government agencies reeling in their wake having caused widespread chaos and panic. Following up from this, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has updated its official guidance for dealing with the impacts of this attack.

The CISA in its latest guidance has advised all US government agencies using the SolarWinds Orion platform to update to the latest version, 2020.2.1.HF2 before the start of 2021.

The CISA has taken a very hard stance in this scenario by stating that agencies that are unable to upgrade by then should take all the Orion systems offline.

CISA has asked the agencies to act at a rapid pace since the fallout from the attack has the potential to snowball into something huge.

The attack had exploited a major vulnerability that allows attackers to bypass Orion API’s authentication and execute code remotely thus gaining complete access.

Supernova malware was being installed in the Orion run servers using this vulnerability. SolarWinds believes that this malware may have been installed by at least a mind boggling 18,000 companies.

It is believed that Solorigate is only the first level attack to gain access. Once access has been gained into the victim’s servers the attackers deploy a Teardrop, another malware strain. Microsoft too corroborates the view that the goal of the attackers was to enter the companies’ networks through the affected Orion app and then escalate their access to the victims’ local networks.

To tackle this, SolarWinds had launched the 2020.2.1HF2 version last week and has claimed that installing this updated version would remove all traces of the Solorigate code.

This has prompted CISA to urge all government agencies to update at once. Several of the government agencies have still not recovered from the effects of the initial attack and the second wave of attack could cripple several agencies.

CISA has also released a free Azure and Microsoft O365 malicious detection tool to counter this attack.

You can follow us on Linkedin, Twitter, Facebook for daily Cybersecurity, and hacking news updates.

Website

Latest articles

Norway Recommends Replacing SSLVPN/WebVPN to Stop Cyber Attacks

A very important message from the Norwegian National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) says that...

New Linux Backdoor Attacking Linux Users Via Installation Packages

Linux is widely used in numerous servers, cloud infrastructure, and Internet of Things devices,...

ViperSoftX Malware Uses Deep Learning Model To Execute Commands

ViperSoftX malware, known for stealing cryptocurrency information, now leverages Tesseract, an open-source OCR engine,...

Santander Data Breach: Hackers Accessed Company Database

Santander has confirmed that there was a major data breach that affected its workers...

U.S. Govt Announces Rewards up to $5 Million for North Korean IT Workers

The U.S. government has offered a prize of up to $5 million for information...

Russian APT Hackers Attacking Critical Infrastructure

Russia leverages a mix of state-backed Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) groups and financially motivated...

Millions Of IoT Devices Vulnerable To Attacks Leads To Full Takeover

Researchers discovered four significant vulnerabilities in the ThroughTek Kalay Platform, which powers 100 million...
Guru baran
Guru baranhttps://gbhackers.com
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.

Free Webinar

Live API Attack Simulation

94% of organizations experience security problems in production APIs, and one in five suffers a data breach. As a result, cyber-attacks on APIs increased from 35% in 2022 to 46% in 2023, and this trend continues to rise.
Key takeaways include:

  • An exploit of OWASP API Top 10 vulnerability
  • A brute force ATO (Account Takeover) attack on API
  • A DDoS attack on an API
  • Positive security model automation to prevent API attacks

Related Articles