Europe Confirms Record €4.1B Penalty Against Google for Android Practices|U.S. CISA adds a Microsoft SharePoint Server flaw to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog|430,000 FortiGate Devices Exposed in FortiBleed Ransomware Link|Adobe fixed multiple maximum-severity flaws in ColdFusion and Campaign Classic|Alleged Scattered Spider Hacker Extradited to U.S. to Face Cybercrime Charges|Oracle E-Business Suite Flaw Under Active Attack, 950 Systems Exposed|Azure CLI Targeted in LSHIY Password Spray Campaign Across 64 Orgs|CISA Warns BlueHammer Flaw Is Now Exploited in Ransomware Attacks|RustDuck: The Botnet That’s Still Small but Engineering Like It Plans to Grow|GuardFall Flaw Hits 10 of 11 Popular Open-Source AI Agents|XSS.is, The Forum That Ran the Ransomware Supply Chain Is Down. The Market Isn’t|U.S. CISA adds SimpleHelp flaw to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog|Europe Confirms Record €4.1B Penalty Against Google for Android Practices|U.S. CISA adds a Microsoft SharePoint Server flaw to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog|430,000 FortiGate Devices Exposed in FortiBleed Ransomware Link|Adobe fixed multiple maximum-severity flaws in ColdFusion and Campaign Classic|Alleged Scattered Spider Hacker Extradited to U.S. to Face Cybercrime Charges|Oracle E-Business Suite Flaw Under Active Attack, 950 Systems Exposed|Azure CLI Targeted in LSHIY Password Spray Campaign Across 64 Orgs|CISA Warns BlueHammer Flaw Is Now Exploited in Ransomware Attacks|RustDuck: The Botnet That’s Still Small but Engineering Like It Plans to Grow|GuardFall Flaw Hits 10 of 11 Popular Open-Source AI Agents|XSS.is, The Forum That Ran the Ransomware Supply Chain Is Down. The Market Isn’t|U.S. CISA adds SimpleHelp flaw to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog|
Advertisement

Ad Placeholder

Full Width × 90

Breaking News

Apache patch a zero-day flaw exploited in the wild

Apache has addressed two vulnerabilities, one of which is a path traversal and file disclosure flaw in its HTTP server actively exploited in the wild. Apache has rolled out security patches to address two flaws, including a path traversal and file disclosure issue in its HTTP server that is actively exploited in the wild. The […]

Apache Roller

Apache has addressed two vulnerabilities, one of which is a path traversal and file disclosure flaw in its HTTP server actively exploited in the wild.

Apache has rolled out security patches to address two flaws, including a path traversal and file disclosure issue in its HTTP server that is actively exploited in the wild.

The two vulnerabilities have been tracked as CVE-2021-41773 and CVE-2021-41524.

The first issue, tracked as CVE-2021-41773, is a path traversal and file disclosure vulnerability in Apache HTTP Server 2.4.49. An attacker can trigger the flaw to map URLs to files outside the expected document root.

“A flaw was found in a change made to path normalization in Apache HTTP Server 2.4.49. An attacker could use a path traversal attack to map URLs to files outside the expected document root.” reads the advisory. “If files outside of the document root are not protected by “require all denied” these requests can succeed. Additionally this flaw could leak the source of interpreted files like CGI scripts.”

The vulnerability affects only Apache 2.4.49, earlier versions are not impacted. The vulnerability was reported by Ash Daulton along with the cPanel Security Team. According to the advisory, the issue is known to be exploited in the wild.

Apache also addressed a null pointer dereference in HTTP/2 fuzzing tracked as CVE-2021-41524.

“While fuzzing the 2.4.49 httpd, a new null pointer dereference was detected during HTTP/2 request processing, allowing an external source to DoS the server. This requires a specially crafted request.” reads the advisory.

An attack can trigger the flaw to perform a denial-of-service (DoS) attack on the server.

The flaw was recently introduced in version 2.4.49.

Users are recommended to install the patches immediately, a growing number of threat actors could start exploiting the flaw in the coming weeks.

Security experts at Positive Technologies announced to have already reproduced the CVE-2021-41773 flaw.

Follow me on Twitter: @securityaffairs and Facebook

[adrotate banner=”9″][adrotate banner=”12″]

Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, Apache)

[adrotate banner=”5″]

[adrotate banner=”13″]