Fortinet has warned of a critical security flaw impacting its FortiClientEMS software that could allow attackers to achieve code execution on affected systems.
“An improper neutralization of special elements used in an SQL Command (‘SQL Injection’) vulnerability [CWE-89] in FortiClientEMS may allow an unauthenticated attacker to execute unauthorized code or commands via specifically crafted requests,” the company said in an advisory.
The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2023-48788, carries a CVSS rating of 9.3 out of a maximum of 10. It impacts the following versions –
Horizon3.ai, which plans to release additional technical details and a proof-of-concept (PoC) exploit next week, said the shortcoming could be exploited to obtain remote code execution as SYSTEM on the server.
Fortinet has credited Thiago Santana from the ForticlientEMS development team and the U.K. National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) for discovering and reporting the flaw.
Also fixed by the company two other critical bugs in FortiOS and FortiProxy (CVE-2023-42789 and CVE-2023-42790, CVSS scores: 9.3) that could permit an attacker with access to the captive portal to execute arbitrary code or commands via specially crafted HTTP requests.
The below product versions are impacted by the flaws –
While there is no evidence that the aforementioned flaws have come under active exploitation, unpatched Fortinet appliances have been repeatedly abused by threat actors, making it imperative that users move quickly to apply the updates.
Cybersecurity company Horizon3.ai, in a separate report, revealed that two of the FortiWLM and FortiSIEM vulnerabilities it reported to Fortinet last year have not been patched to date –
“The web session ID token of authenticated users remains static, and unchanged, for users between sessions,” security researcher Zach Hanley said. “Each time a user logs in, they receive the exact same session ID token. This token remains static for each boot of the device.”
“An attacker that can obtain this token can abuse this behavior to hijack sessions and perform administrative actions. This session ID is retrievable with the unpatch limited log file read vulnerability above and can be used to gain administrative permissions to the appliance.”
Reference: https://thehackernews.com/2024/03/fortinet-warns-of-severe-sqli.html