Government

CISA, FBI Urge Organizations to Eliminate XSS Vulnerabilities

CISA and the FBI have released an alert on XSS vulnerabilities, urging organizations to adopt a secure by design approach and eliminate them.

CISA and the FBI have released an alert on XSS vulnerabilities, urging organizations to adopt a secure by design approach and eliminate them.

The US cybersecurity agency CISA and the FBI have issued a Secure by Design alert on the prevalence of cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities, urging organizations to eliminate them from their products.

XSS flaws, the two agencies note in the alert (PDF), exist because user input is not properly validated, sanitized, or escaped, which allows threat actors to inject malicious scripts into web applications, leading to data manipulation, theft, or misuse.

“Although some developers employ input sanitization techniques to prevent XSS vulnerabilities, this approach is not infallible and should be reinforced with additional security measures,” CISA and the FBI note.

The two agencies urge organizations to “review instances of these defects” and implement plans to prevent them in their products.

Organizations are advised to review written threat models, ensure that software validates input for both structure and meaning, conduct code reviews, implement adversarial product testing to verify the quality and security of code, and use modern web frameworks that ensure proper escaping or quoting.

Modern web frameworks, the two agencies argue, can distinguish between user input and application code, and their use makes it easier for developers to ensure that user input is properly escaped. Otherwise, proper escaping and sanitization falls onto the developer.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

“Senior executives and business leaders should ask their teams how they are working to eliminate these defects and whether they are implementing a secure by design approach in their products,” CISA and the FBI note.

They also advise organizations to implement three secure by design principles to protect their products from XSS exploits: taking ownership of customer security outcomes, embracing radical transparency and accountability, and building organizational structure and leadership to achieve these goals.

“To demonstrate their commitment to building their products that are secure by design, software manufacturers should consider taking the Secure by Design Pledge. The pledge lays out seven key goals that the signers commit to demonstrating measurable progress towards, including reducing systemic classes of vulnerability like cross-site scripting,” the two agencies note.

Related: CISA, FBI Urge Immediate Action on OS Command Injection Vulnerabilities in Network Devices

Related: Federal Push for Secure-by-Design: What It Means for Developers

Related: CISA Introduces Secure-by-design and Secure-by-default Development Principles

Related: Quad Nations Commit to Fostering a Secure Technology Ecosystem

Related Content

Government

The new BOD 26-04 requires agencies to review and update vulnerability management policies with a focus on KEV catalog entries.

ICS/OT

Many ICS vendors have not released new advisories for the May 2026 Patch Tuesday.

Government

Agency issued guidance and calls on operators to build resilient OT environments capable of surviving extended isolation and cyber compromise.

Government

The Trump administration says the FY2027 budget refocuses CISA on its core mission: protecting federal agencies and critical infrastructure.

Incident Response

Police in Germany physically warned organizations about the critical PTC Windchill vulnerability tracked as CVE-2026-4681.

Government

Madhu Gottumukkala has been assigned to a new role within the Department of Homeland Security.

Government

CISA is currently operating at roughly 38% capacity (888 out of 2,341 staff) due to the DHS shutdown that began February 14, 2026.

Vulnerabilities

Disclosed at the end of January, the SolarWinds vulnerability was likely exploited as a zero-day since December 2025.

Copyright © 2026 SecurityWeek ®, a Wired Business Media Publication. All Rights Reserved.

Exit mobile version