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Ivanti customers confront yet another actively exploited zero-day

7 May 2026 at 17:50

Attackers are hitting Ivanti customers yet again — circling back to a common target and consistently susceptible vendor in the network edge space — by exploiting a zero-day vulnerability in one of the company’s most besieged products. 

Ivanti warned customers that attackers have successfully exploited CVE-2026-6973, an improper input validation defect in Ivanti Endpoint Manager Mobile (EPMM) that allows authenticated users with administrative privileges to run code remotely. The company alerted customers to the threat in a security advisory Thursday while also disclosing four additional high-severity vulnerabilities in the same product.

“At the time of disclosure, Ivanti is aware of very limited exploitation in the wild of CVE-2026-6973, which requires authenticated administrative access to implement,” a spokesperson for Ivanti said in a statement.

Ivanti did not say when the first instance of exploitation occurred, or precisely how many customers have already been impacted.

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency added the zero-day to its known exploited vulnerabilities catalog within hours of Ivanti’s disclosure.

The company released patches for all five vulnerabilities Thursday, including the four additional defects — CVE-2026-5787, CVE-2026-5788, CVE-2026-6973 and CVE-2026-7821 — which it said haven’t been exploited in the wild.

“Ivanti discovered these vulnerabilities in recent weeks through internal detection processes which are supported by advanced AI, customer collaboration, and responsible disclosure,” the company spokesperson said. One of the defects was discovered and responsibly reported to Ivanti by a former employee.

The company suggested at least one of the root causes for the latest zero-day may be traced to lingering risk posed by a pair of separate, critical zero-days — CVE-2026-1281 and CVE-2026-1340 — that were exploited starting in late January. The fallout from those exploited vulnerabilities in Ivanti EPMM spread to nearly 100 victims, including The Netherlands’ Dutch Data Protection Authority and the Council for the Judiciary, by early February.

The latest Ivanti EPMM zero-day “requires authenticated administrative access to exploit, which is why customers who followed Ivanti’s recommendation in January to rotate EPMM credentials are at significantly reduced risk. Customers unaffected by the prior vulnerability are also at a much lower risk,” the company spokesperson said.

Caitlin Condon, vice president of security research at VulnCheck, said the administrative privileges required to exploit CVE-2026-6973 indicates it was possibly exploited as part of an attack chain relying on another method for initial access. 

“No attribution was shared on threat actor exploitation of CVE-2026-6973, but two other 2026 CVEs in Ivanti EPMM — CVE-2026-1281 and CVE-2026-1340 — have been exploited by a range of threat actors, including China- and Iran-attributed groups,” Condon told CyberScoop. 

“Those vulnerabilities notably were code-injection vulnerabilities that were remotely exploitable without authentication, unlike CVE-2026-6973,” she added. “Both CVE-2026-1281 and CVE-2026-1340 appear to have been fixed in today’s Ivanti release. Comparatively, these earlier vulns were of higher initial concern than today’s fresh zero-day vulnerability, which requires admin authentication.”

Attacks involving Ivanti defects are a recurring problem for the vendor’s customers and security practitioners at large, including many vulnerabilities that attackers exploited before the company caught or fixed the errors. 

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has flagged 34 Ivanti defects on its known exploited vulnerabilities catalog since late 2021. At least 22 defects across Ivanti products have been exploited in the past two years, including five vulnerabilities in Ivanti EPMM in the last year.

During an interview with CyberScoop in March at the RSAC Conference, Ivanti Chief Security Officer Daniel Spicer said the company’s transparency partly explains the high number of vulnerabilities reported and disclosed in its products. 

“My position here at Ivanti is it doesn’t do our customers any good to be quiet about this,” he said, describing the company’s communication stance with the public, CISA and global partners as “very aggressive.”

That’s not always the case with other vendors, Spicer said. “I don’t know that transparency is a core tenant of all other organizations.”

The company, which serves many government agencies and critical infrastructure operators, also routinely notes that highly skilled and resourced attackers, including those backed by nation-states, are often responsible for these waves of attacks on its customers.

Ivanti maintains that it’s trying to consistently improve the security of its products. “Through continued investment in its product security program, including the use of advanced AI paired with human verification, Ivanti is strengthening its ability to identify, remediate, and disclose issues quickly, helping customers stay ahead of an increasingly compressed threat landscape,” the spokesperson said.

The way Spicer put it in March: “We want to make sure that people understand that we are trying to do the right thing.”

The post Ivanti customers confront yet another actively exploited zero-day appeared first on CyberScoop.

Network ‘background noise’ may predict the next big edge-device vulnerability

20 April 2026 at 06:00

Attackers rarely exploit an edge-device vulnerability indiscriminately. Typically, they first test how widely the flaw can be used and how much access it can provide, then move on to steal data or disrupt operations.

Pre-attack surveillance and planning leaves a lot of noise in its wake. These signals — particularly spikes in traffic that are hitting specific vendors — can act as an early-warning system, often preceding public vulnerability disclosures, according to research GreyNoise shared exclusively with CyberScoop prior to its release. 

Roughly half of every activity surge GreyNoise detected during a 103-day study last winter was followed by a vulnerability disclosure from the same targeted vendor within three weeks, GreyNoise said in its report.

Researchers determined that the median warning of an impending vulnerability disclosure arrived nine days before the targeted vendor issued a public alert to its customers.

“Virtually every time we see large scale spikes in reconnaissance and inventory activity looking for a certain device, it’s because somebody knows about a vulnerability,” Andrew Morris, founder and chief architect at GreyNoise, told CyberScoop.

“Within a few days or weeks — usually within the responsible disclosure timeline — a new very bad vulnerability comes out,” he added.

GreyNoise insists that every day of advance notice matters, giving defenders an opportunity to defend against and thwart potential attacks before they occur. 

The real-time network edge scanning platform spotted 104 distinct activity surges across 18 vendors during its study period. These embedded systems, including routers, VPNs, firewalls and other security systems, consistently account for the most commonly exploited vulnerabilities.

“Attackers love hacking security devices like security appliances. The irony of that is just not lost on me at all,” Morris said.

“It hasn’t gotten bad enough for us to start taking the security of these devices seriously,” he added. “It’s not bad enough for us to take it seriously enough to start ripping these things out and replacing them with new devices or new vendors.”

GreyNoise linked traffic surges to a swarm of vulnerabilities disclosed by vendors across the market, including Cisco, Palo Alto Networks, Fortinet, Ivanti, HPE, MicroTik, TP-Link, VMware, Juniper, F5, Netgear and others.

“It’s becoming scientifically empirical, and it’s becoming more like meteorology than mysticism,” Morris said. “This is like clockwork now.”

GreyNoise breaks these traffic surges down to measure intensity and breadth. Session counts indicate how hard existing sources are hammering a specific vendor and unique source IP counts demonstrate how widely new infrastructure is joining the activity, researchers wrote in the report.

“When both the intensity and breadth of targeting increase simultaneously, it signals a coordinated escalation,” the report said. 

“When you see a session spike against one of your vendors and new source IPs joining at the same time, treat it as a high-confidence reason to look harder. When you see only an IP spike, do not assume a vulnerability is coming,” researchers added. 

The study bolsters other research from Verizon, Google Threat Intelligence Group and Mandiant — landing during what GreyNoise calls “the most aggressive period of edge device exploitation on record.”

This activity doesn’t happen in a vacuum and threat groups aren’t flooding edge devices with traffic for free or for fun, according to Morris.

“People tend to treat internet background noise like it’s this unexplainable phenomenon,” he said. “They’re clearly trying to test the existence of a vulnerability in order to compromise the systems.”

The post Network ‘background noise’ may predict the next big edge-device vulnerability appeared first on CyberScoop.

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