IBM X-Force Publishes a List of Top 10 Cybersecurity Vulnerabilities of 2020
The severity of cyber-attacks has grown over the past year especially during the global pandemic. Threat actors are looking for unpatched issues or common vulnerabilities and exposures (CVEs) and are exploiting those vulnerabilities to gain initial access to a network.
According to the 2021 X-Force Threat Intelligence Index, the list of the 10 most exploited susceptibilities of 2020 was dominated by older security issues, with just two out of the top 10 being spotted in 2020. Since 1988, the number of flaws discovered each year has followed a general upward trend with 17,992 new flaws discovered in 2020.
Top 10 CVEs exploited by threat actors
IBM security X-force revealed a list of top 10 CVEs of 2020 based on how frequently threat actors exploited them. The list is based on both IBM X-Force incident response (IR) and IBM managed security services (MSS) data for 2020. Mostly, threat actors targeted common enterprise applications and open-source frameworks that many organizations use within their networks.
•CVE-2019-19871: Citrix Application Delivery Controller (ADC)
•CVE-2018-20062: NoneCMS ThinkPHP Remote Code Execution
•CVE-2006-1547: ActionForm in Apache Software Foundation (SAF) Struts
•CVE-2012-0391: ExceptionDelegator component in Apache Struts
•CVE-2014-6271: GNU Bash Command Injection
•CVE-2019-0708: ‘Bluekeep’ Microsoft Remote Desktop Services Remote Code Execution
•CVE-2020-8515: Draytek Vigor Command Injection
•CVE-2018-13382 and CVE-2018-13379: Improper Authorization and Path Traversal in Fortinet FortiOS
•CVE-2018-11776: Apache Struts Remote Code Execution
•CVE-2020-5722: HTTP: Grandstream UCM6200 SQL Injection
How to manage the flaws and shield the network from CVEs?
To patch the vulnerabilities or to protect the network from CVEs, you need to make hard decisions and require accounting for asset and data classification, business goals, risk, performance benchmarks, and much more. Some networks have sensitive machines and infrastructure that need rigorous testing to ensure nothing will fail when an update or patch is applied.
Three important techniques can be used to execute a robust patch-management program:
(1). Organizations can use vulnerability management tools and crown jewel analysis to identify which assets are classified as critical to your organization, and which flaws are most likely to impact those assets.
(2). Organizations can design a test environment that can assist in discovering the problems that may occur once a patch is installed in your enterprise environment.
(3). Companies should update their devices, operating systems, applications, versions, and cloud assets every quarter.
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