Fortra’s GoAnywhere MFT Software Faces Exploitation, No Evidence of Active Exploitation Detected

 

Reports on the exploitation of Fortra’s GoAnywhere MFT file transfer software raised concerns due to the potential development of exploit code from a publicly released Proof of Concept (PoC). As of Thursday afternoon, there was no evidence of active exploitation.
Researchers from Shadowserver, in a post dated January 25, noted over 120 instances of exploits based on the publicly released PoC code. However, they suggested that widespread success for attackers is unlikely due to the limited exposure of admin portals (only 50) and the majority being patched.
The vulnerability, identified as CVE-2024-0204 with a CVSSv3 score of 9.8, enables hackers to remotely create a new admin user through the software’s administration portal. This issue emerged a year after the Clop ransomware gang exploited a GoAnywhere MFT zero-day vulnerability, compromising over 130 organizations. Fortra responded by releasing a patch on January 22, urging immediate action from security teams. The company had notified customers on December 4 and released the patch on December 7.
Ashley Leonard, CEO at Syxsense, emphasized the critical nature of the CVE, stating that the vulnerability allows unauthorized users to bypass authentication and create a new admin account remotely.
Despite the lack of ac

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