The holidays are coming up quickly and while many of us are looking forward to getting some human downtime (not technical), some may be feeling the pressure and some stress to make sure everything that needs to be done by the end of the year is in fact done by then, especially with the ongoing log4j aka log4shell security fires happening.
The vulnerability, dubbed CVE-2021-43798 impacted the Grafana dashboard, which is used by companies around the world to monitor and aggregate logs and other parameters from across their local or remote networks. The privately reported bug became a leaked zero-day but was first spotted by Detectify Crowdsource hacker Jordy Versmissen on December 2, after which Grafana was notified by Detectify about the bug.
Thanks to Detectify Crowdsource hackers, Detectify quickly developed a security test to detect Critical vulnerability CVE-2021-44228 Apache log4j RCE. This vulnerability has set the internet alight over the past few days. Right now, exploit developers and security researchers are still understanding the potential capabilities provided by the vulnerability. Detectify received a working POC for this critical 0-day vulnerability from the Crowdsource community on Friday.
Detectify co-founder and expert bug bounty hunter Fredrik Nordberg Almroth (@almroot) recently spoke at Hack Your Stockholm, our first in-person event after a 2-year hiatus, addressing the issue of the growing attack surface of companies and how it is the most pressing issue facing CISOs today. He recaps his thoughts in this post.