Quote:Buggy firmware opens a number of D-Link VPN router models to zero-day attacks. The flaws, which lack a complete vendor fix, allow adversaries to launch root command injection attacks that can be executed remotely and allow for device takeover.
Impacted are D-Link router models DSR-150, DSR-250, DSR-500 and DSR-1000AC VPN running firmware version 3.14 and 3.17, according to a report published Tuesday by Digital Defense. The attacks are dependent on three chained bugs identified by researchers as an unauthenticated remote LAN/WAN root command injection flaw, authenticated root command injection vulnerability and an authenticated crontab injection.
The flaws (CVE-2020-25757, CVE-2020-25759, CVE-2020-25758) were confirmed by D-Link. However, the company says beta firmware patches and hot-patch mitigations available for its DSR-150, DSR-250 and DSR-500 models significantly reduce the ability for an adversary to target a vulnerable router.
“The two vulnerabilities were confirmed, and patches are under development. One of the reported vulnerabilities is how the device functionally works, and D-Link will not correct it on this generation of products,” D-Link wrote in response to the research.
Some of the impacted router models were first introduced in 2012 and appear to lack the same type of patching cadence as more modern D-Link router models. For example, D-Link’s DSR-150, was released over seven-years ago.
Absent from the D-Link support page is information or fixes for more recent router models DSR-500 and DSR-1000AC VPN. Both were identified by Digital Defense as vulnerable to remotely exploitable root command injection flaws.
Read more: https://threatpost.com/d-link-routers-ze...ws/162064/


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