Business software maker Atlassian on Wednesday called immediate attention to a major security defect in its Confluence Data Center and Server products and warned that the issue has already been exploited as zero-day in the wild.
An urgent advisory from Atlassian confirms that “a handful of customers” were hit by exploits targeting a remotely exploitable flaw in Confluence Data Center and Server instances.
“Atlassian has been made aware of an issue reported by a handful of customers where external attackers may have exploited a previously unknown vulnerability in publicly accessible Confluence Data Center and Server instances to create unauthorized Confluence administrator accounts and access Confluence instances,” the Australian company said.
The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2023-22515, is described as a remotely exploitable privilege escalation issue affecting on-prem instances of Confluence Server and Confluence Data Center.
“Instances on the public internet are particularly at risk, as this vulnerability is exploitable anonymously,” Atlassian warned. “If an instance has already been compromised, upgrading will not remove the compromise.”
The company said Atlassian Cloud sites are not vulnerable to this issue.
Security vendor Rapid7 is underscoring the urgency for businesses to apply available patches and mitigations.
“Atlassian’s advisory implies that the vulnerability is remotely exploitable, which is typically more consistent with an authentication bypass or remote code execution chain than a privilege escalation issue by itself,” Rapid7’s Caitlin Condon said.
Atlassian has published an FAQ urging business users to immediately check all affected Confluence instances for the following indicators of compromise:
- Unexpected members of the confluence-administrator group
- Unexpected newly created user accounts
- Requests to /setup/*.action in network access logs
- Presence of /setup/setupadministrator.action in an exception message in atlassian-confluence-security.log in the Confluence home directory
“If it is determined that your instance has been compromised, our advice is to immediately shut down and disconnect the server from the network/Internet. Also, you may want to immediately shut down any other systems which potentially share a user base or have common username/password combinations with the compromised system,” Atlassian added.
Security problems in Atlassian’s software products have been targeted in the past by both cybercriminal and state-sponsored threat actors. In CISA’s KEV (Known Exploited Vulnerabilities) catalog, there are six distinct Confluence vulnerabilities marked for urgent attention.
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