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Moxa MXview Vulnerabilities Expose Industrial Networks to Attacks

Several vulnerabilities, including some that have been rated “critical,” were found in the past months in Moxa’s MXview industrial network management software.

<p><span style="font-size: medium; font-weight: bold;"><span>Several vulnerabilities, including some that have been rated “critical,” were found in the past months in Moxa’s MXview industrial network management software.</span></span></p>

Several vulnerabilities, including some that have been rated “critical,” were found in the past months in Moxa’s MXview industrial network management software.

Five types of vulnerabilities were discovered by researchers at industrial and IoT cybersecurity company Claroty. They were patched in September 2021 with the release of version 3.2.4, but their details were disclosed last week by Claroty. The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) published an advisory in October 2021 to warn organizations about these flaws.

Moxa MXview is a web-based network management system designed for configuring, monitoring, and diagnosing networking devices in industrial networks. The product enables users to manage devices via a web browser, including from local or remote sites.

“An attacker can exploit an unpatched Moxa server by chaining several of the vulnerabilities we uncovered to achieve remote code execution,” Noam Moshe, vulnerability researcher at Claroty, told SecurityWeek.

“Network management systems such as MXview not only handle discovery of network devices and connections, but administrators use it to centrally manage configurations and firmware updates for Moxa devices on the network. An attacker with this kind of access can manipulate these configurations to alter processes and affect device integrity,” Moshe explained.

Claroty has identified a misconfigured service that can allow an attacker to abuse the MQTT messaging protocol, which is typically used for IoT and machine-to-machine (M2M) applications.

The cybersecurity firm’s researchers also identified a flaw that can be leveraged by an unauthenticated attacker to read any file from the targeted operating system, including files that contain clear text configurations and passwords, including the password for the MQTT broker.

Another vulnerability can be exploited for unauthenticated remote command execution. A high-severity weakness can allow an unauthenticated user to write arbitrary files on the host server.

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Claroty has explained in its blog post how some of these vulnerabilities can be chained by a remote, unauthenticated attacker for arbitrary code execution with elevated privileges.

Cisco’s Talos threat intelligence and research unit disclosed two Moxa MXview vulnerabilities last week, including a critical authentication bypass vulnerability that can be exploited by sending specially crafted HTTP requests.

The second security bug has been classified as medium severity and it can allow an attacker to obtain potentially sensitive information by sniffing network traffic.

The vulnerabilities discovered by Talos were fixed recently with the release of version 3.2.6. Moxa published an advisory on February 11, and on Monday provided instructions for updating MXview.

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