Ryan Seguin, a research engineer at Tenable explains in his blog that this vulnerability utilizes default vBulletin configurations. This enables an unauthenticated attacker to send a specially crafted HTTP POST request to a vulnerable vBulletin host and execute commands. He further states, “These commands would be executed with the permissions of the user account that the vBulletin service is utilizing. Depending on the service user’s permissions, this could allow complete control of a host.”
Another security researcher, Troy Mursch of the Bad Packets security intelligence service told Arstechnica that the attackers are employing botnets to actively exploit vulnerable servers. The exploit, Mursch says, can modify the includes/vb5/frontend/controller/bbcode.php via the "sed" command to add a backdoor to the code.
Mursch adds, “This is done by setting a “password” (epass) of 2dmfrb28nu3c6s9j. By doing this, the compromised site will only execute code in the eval function if 2dmfrb28nu3c6s9j is set in future requests sent to the server. This would allow a botnet command-and-control (C2) server to exclusively exploit CVE-2019-16759 and issue commands to the targeted site. The vulnerability itself has been regarded by some as a backdoor.”
The vBulletin vulnerability is exploiting websites via the backdoor to build a list of bots that can configure supplementary ways of exploiting the infected hosts. The backdoor can infect the compromised hosts with DDoS malware and conduct denial-of-service attacks.
It is not known yet if the anonymous publisher of this vulnerability had reported the vulnerability to the vBulletin team or not. Another possibility is that the vBulletin team could not find a timely solution to this issue, encouraging the user to publish the vulnerability on Full Disclosure. The anonymous researcher has published about the zero-day vulnerability from an unnamed email service.
vBulletin, a popular web forum software package has around 0.1% market share of all the running forums across the internet. Though the percentage looks small, the vulnerability in vBulletin can impact billions of internet users, reports ZDNet. vBulletin is designed to collect user information about registered users. “While billions of internet sites don't store any info about users, a handful of online forums could very easily store data on most internet users. Therefore, a market share of 0.1% is actually pretty significant, when we factor in how many users could be registered on these forums.”
Steam, EA, Zynga, NASA, Sony, BodyBuilding.com, the Houston Texans, and the Denver Broncos are some of the customers that use the vBulletin server.
Yesterday, GreyNoise, a cybersecurity company has tweeted that the vBulletin hackers are actively using this vulnerability to attack vulnerable forums.
https://twitter.com/GreyNoiseIO/status/1176898873622781954
According to Chaouki Bekrar, founder and CEO of the Zerodium exploit broker, the vulnerability is known for many years.
https://twitter.com/cBekrar/status/1176803541047861249
The vBulletin team has already issued a patch for CVE-2019-16759 for vBulletin versions 5.5.2, 5.5.3, and 5.5.4. Users on earlier versions of vBulletin 5.x are advised to update to one of the supported versions in order to implement the patch. The vBulletin cloud version has already updated and fixed this issue.
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