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Chinese govt-backed hackers exploiting bug in Citrix products: US NSA

By IANS | Updated: December 15, 2022 10:55 IST

Washington, Dec 15 Chinese government-backed hackers are exploiting a zero-day vulnerability in two widely used Citrix networking products ...

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Washington, Dec 15 Chinese government-backed hackers are exploiting a zero-day vulnerability in two widely used Citrix networking products to gain access to systems, the US government has warned.

According to the National Security Agency (NSA), the vulnerability allows hackers to remotely run malicious code on vulnerable devices no passwords needed.

The desktop virtualisation company also admitted the bug is being actively exploited by threat actors.

"We are aware of a small number of targeted attacks in the wild using this vulnerability," said Peter Lefkowitz, chief security and trust officer at Citrix.

"Limited exploits of this vulnerability have been reported," he added in a Blog post.

The company has released security updates for both products Citrix ADC, an application delivery controller, and Citrix Gateway, a remote access tool.

"As part of our internal reviews and in working with our security partners, we have identified vulnerabilities in Citrix ADC and Citrix Gateway 12.1 and 13.0 before 13.0-58.32 builds," said the company.

Customers are urged to install the recommended builds immediately as this vulnerability has been identified as critical and aceno workarounds are available for this vulnerability".

According to an NSA advisory, APT5, a Chinese hacking group, has been actively targeting Citrix application delivery controllers (ADCs).

"Targeting Citrix ADCs can facilitate illegitimate access to targeted organisations by bypassing normal authentication controls," read the advisory.

"Move all Citrix ADC instances behind a VPN or other capability that requires valid user authentication (ideally multi-factor) prior to being able to access the ADC and isolate the Citrix ADC appliances from the environment to ensure any malicious activity is contained," the NSA recommended.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Gary Peter LefkowitzNational Security AgencyCitrixGlobal cyber securityUs national security agencyPalace serviceUs national security advisorUk security service
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