Microsoft Issues Improved Mitigations for Unpatched Exchange Server Vulnerabilities

2 years ago 173
BOOK THIS SPACE FOR AD
ARTICLE AD

Exchange Server Vulnerabilities

Microsoft on Friday disclosed it has made more improvements to the mitigation method offered as a means to prevent exploitation attempts against the newly disclosed unpatched security flaws in Exchange Server.

To that end, the tech giant has revised the blocking rule in IIS Manager from ".*autodiscover\.json.*Powershell.*" to "(?=.*autodiscover\.json)(?=.*powershell)."

CyberSecurity

The list of updated steps to add the URL Rewrite rule is below -

Open IIS Manager Select Default Web Site In the Feature View, click URL Rewrite In the Actions pane on the right-hand side, click Add Rule(s)… Select Request Blocking and click OK Add the string "(?=.*autodiscover\.json)(?=.*powershell)" (excluding quotes) Select Regular Expression under Using Select Abort Request under How to block and then click OK Expand the rule and select the rule with the pattern: (?=.*autodiscover\.json)(?=.*powershell) and click Edit under Conditions Change the Condition input from {URL} to {UrlDecode:{REQUEST_URI}} and then click OK

Alternatively, users can achieve the desired protections by executing a PowerShell-based Exchange On-premises Mitigation Tool (EOMTv2.ps1), which has also been updated to take into account the aforementioned URL pattern.

CyberSecurity

The actively-exploited issues, called ProxyNotShell (CVE-2022-41040 and CVE-2022-41082), are yet to be addressed by Microsoft, although with Patch Tuesday right around the corner, the wait may not be for long.

Successful weaponization of the flaws could enable an authenticated attacker to chain the two vulnerabilities to achieve remote code execution on the underlying server.

The tech giant, last week, acknowledged that the shortcomings may have been abused by a single state-sponsored threat actor since August 2022 in limited targeted attacks aimed at less than 10 organizations worldwide.


Found this article interesting? Follow THN on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post.

Read Entire Article