Zyxel Firewalls and VPNs under Active Cyberattack
Taiwanese networking equipment company Zyxel is warning customers of an on-going attack targeting a “small subset” of its security products such as firewall and VPN servers.
Attributing the attacks to a “sophisticated threat actor,” the firm noted that the attacks single out appliances that have remote management or SSL VPN enabled, namely in the USG/ZyWALL, USG FLEX, ATP, and VPN series running on-premise ZLD firmware, implying that the targeted devices are publicly accessible over the internet.
“The threat actor attempts to access a device through WAN; if successful, they then bypass authentication and establish SSL VPN tunnels with unknown user accounts, such as ‘zyxel_slIvpn’, ‘zyxel_ts’, or ‘zyxel_vpn_test’, to manipulate the device’s configuration,” Zyxel said in an email message, which was shared on Twitter.
As of writing, it’s not immediately known if the attacks are exploiting previously known vulnerabilities in Zyxel devices or if they leverage a zero-day flaw to breach the systems. Also unclear is the scale of the attack and the number of users affected.
To reduce the attack surface, the company is recommending customers to disable HTTP/HTTPS services from the WAN and implement a list of restricted geo-IP to enable remote access only from trusted locations Earlier this year, Zyxel patched a critical vulnerability in its firmware to remove a hard-coded user account “zyfwp” (CVE-2020-29583) that could be abused by an attacker to login with administrative privileges and compromise the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of the device.
The development comes as enterprise VPNs and other network devices have become a top target of attackers in a series of campaigns aimed at finding new avenues into corporate networks, giving the threat actors the ability to laterally move across the network and gather sensitive intelligence for espionage and other financially-motivated operations.
Recommendations for Prevention from VPN and Firewall attacks:
You should patch all your VPN servers, firewalls, and routers as soon as possible. To prevent and detect hackers who exploit zero-day vulnerabilities or short vulnerability windows, do some threat hunting regularly. Threat hunting is the process of exploring your network to see if you have any indicators of hacker activity. Look for activities like outgoing pings from a system in your network; conduct behavioral analytics; seek out any unusual resource accesses or logons; and more. You may sometimes find the trails of hackers who got into your network before the security loophole was sealed.
Some additional measures to consider:-
· Use the most recent version of your VPN software
· Review your VPN connections
· Filter VPN traffic
· Apply VPN patches