EU, Dutch government announce hacks following Ivanti zero-days
嗯,用户让我用中文总结这篇文章,控制在100字以内,而且不需要用“文章内容总结”这样的开头。首先,我得通读整篇文章,抓住主要信息。 文章讲的是Ivanti的Endpoint Manager Mobile(EPMM)存在两个严重漏洞,CVE-2026-1281和CVE-2026-1340,CVSS评分高达9.8。这些漏洞允许黑客无需用户名密码就能控制设备。Ivanti在1月底发布了补丁和安全公告,建议用户检查日志。 多个国家的网络安全机构都发出了警告,包括荷兰、欧盟、美国、加拿大和新加坡。荷兰的数据保护局和司法委员会确认被黑,涉及员工信息泄露。欧盟委员会也检测到类似攻击,但未造成设备妥协。英国的NHS也警告有相关活动。 这些漏洞被多个威胁行为者利用,显示出边缘设备作为攻击目标的吸引力。挪威政府之前也因EPMM漏洞被攻击过。 总结的时候要包括关键点:EPMM漏洞、评分、影响范围、国家警告、数据泄露情况以及威胁行为者的利用情况。 控制在100字以内的话,需要简洁明了地涵盖这些内容。避免使用复杂的句子结构,直接陈述事实。 </think> Ivanti Endpoint Manager Mobile(EPMM)的两个关键漏洞(CVE-2026-1281和CVE-2026-1340)引发全球网络安全警告。这些漏洞允许黑客无需身份验证即可控制设备,并已被多个威胁行为者利用。荷兰、欧盟、美国等国家和组织报告了相关攻击事件,涉及敏感数据泄露。Ivanti已发布补丁修复漏洞,并建议用户检查系统安全性以应对潜在风险。 2026-2-9 13:46:6 Author: therecord.media(查看原文) 阅读量:0 收藏

A wave of cyberattacks tied to vulnerabilities in Ivanti Endpoint Manager Mobile (EPMM) is triggering emergency warnings worldwide from national security agencies.

The two critical vulnerabilities in EPMM — a product used to manage an organization’s mobile devices, controlling phones and tablets and enforcing app settings and security rules — could allow hackers to take control over these devices without needing either a username or a password.

Ivanti issued patches and an advisory in late January disclosing the two critical code injection vulnerabilities tracked as CVE-2026-1281 and CVE-2026-1340. Customers were urged to treat exposed systems as potentially compromised and review logs for signs of exploitation.

Both of the vulnerabilities were rated critical, with CVSS base scores of 9.8, making them among the most severe types of security flaws. Ivanti said it was aware “a very limited number of customers” had been attacked while the vulnerabilities were still unpatched.

In a statement to the country’s parliament on Friday, the Dutch Data Protection Authority and the Judicial Council confirmed being hacked. It is not clear when these hacks took place.

The country’s State Secretary for the Interior and State Secretary for Justice and Security confirmed that work-related data "such as name, business email address and telephone number" were viewed by unauthorized persons, although the full extent of the compromise is still being investigated.

At the same time, although it did not explicitly identify Ivanti EPMM as the targeted service, the European Commission also confirmed its “central infrastructure managing mobile devices” had detected a cyberattack which resembles the Dutch breach.

The attack on the Commission’s mobile management infrastructure “may have resulted in access to staff names and mobile numbers of some of its staff members,” it announced, adding a “swift response ensured the incident was contained and the system cleaned within nine hours. No compromise of mobile devices was detected.”

The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has also added one of the flaws to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog, signaling confirmed abuse in the wild. National cyber agencies in Canada and Singapore also followed with alerts confirming attackers are weaponising the Ivanti bugs against unpatched environments.

In the United Kingdom, NHS Digital’s National Cyber Security Operations Centre (CSOC) warned that healthcare networks have detected activity linked to the same vulnerabilities, prompting urgent mitigation efforts, although it did not confirm whether a breach had taken place.

“Edge devices like EPMM are internet-facing by design and are highly attractive targets to attackers, and there are an increasing number of edge device vulnerabilities disclosed each year that are rapidly exploited by attackers,” CSOC said. “The NHS England National CSOC assesses it is highly likely vulnerabilities discovered in edge devices will continue to be exploited as zero-day vulnerabilities, or shortly after vendor disclosure.”

No public attribution has yet been made for the attacks, and it is unclear whether the vulnerabilities are being exploited by a single threat actor or several of them.

Similar issues in EPMM had previously been exploited in 2023, with the government of Norway revealing that 12 of its agencies had been hacked through the flaws. That case involved different vulnerabilities in the same product family, underscoring how frequently mobile management platforms have become high-value targets.

Get more insights with the

Recorded Future

Intelligence Cloud.

Learn more.

Recorded Future

No previous article

No new articles

Alexander Martin

Alexander Martin

is the UK Editor for Recorded Future News. He was previously a technology reporter for Sky News and a fellow at the European Cyber Conflict Research Initiative, now Virtual Routes. He can be reached securely using Signal on: AlexanderMartin.79


文章来源: https://therecord.media/eu-dutch-government-announce-hacks-ivanti-zero-days
如有侵权请联系:admin#unsafe.sh