Visualização normal

Ontem — 8 de Maio de 2026Stream principal
  • ✇Security Affairs
  • Nation-state actors exploit Palo Alto PAN-OS zero-day for weeks Pierluigi Paganini
    Palo Alto says hackers exploited PAN-OS zero-day CVE-2026-0300 for weeks, gaining root access to exposed firewalls and hiding traces. Palo Alto Networks warned that suspected state-sponsored hackers have been exploiting the critical PAN-OS zero-day CVE-2026-0300 for nearly a month. After exploiting the flaw, attackers deployed tunneling tools such as EarthWorm and ReverseSocks5, used stolen credentials to probe Active Directory, and deleted logs and other evidence to hide the intrusion. “
     

Nation-state actors exploit Palo Alto PAN-OS zero-day for weeks

7 de Maio de 2026, 17:44

Palo Alto says hackers exploited PAN-OS zero-day CVE-2026-0300 for weeks, gaining root access to exposed firewalls and hiding traces.

Palo Alto Networks warned that suspected state-sponsored hackers have been exploiting the critical PAN-OS zero-day CVE-2026-0300 for nearly a month. After exploiting the flaw, attackers deployed tunneling tools such as EarthWorm and ReverseSocks5, used stolen credentials to probe Active Directory, and deleted logs and other evidence to hide the intrusion.

“We are aware of only limited exploitation of CVE-2026-0300 at this time. Unit 42 is tracking CL-STA-1132, a cluster of likely state-sponsored threat activity exploiting CVE-2026-0300. The attacker behind this activity exploited CVE-2026-0300 to achieve unauthenticated remote code execution (RCE) in PAN-OS software. Upon successful exploitation, the attacker was able to inject shellcode into an nginx worker process.” reads the advisory by the cybersecurity vendor. “Post-exploitation activity includes deployment of publicly available tunneling tools (EarthWorm, ReverseSocks5), Active Directory enumeration using credentials likely obtained from the firewall, and the systematic destruction of logs and other evidence of compromise.”

EarthWorm has been used in past attacks associated with several China-linked threat actors, including , APT41, CL-STA-0046, and Volt Typhoon.

The flaw is a buffer overflow that allows unauthenticated remote code execution, especially when the User-ID portal is exposed to the internet.

“A buffer overflow vulnerability in the User-ID™ Authentication Portal (aka Captive Portal) service of Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS software allows an unauthenticated attacker to execute arbitrary code with root privileges on the PA-Series and VM-Series firewalls by sending specially crafted packets.” reads the advisory published by Palo Alto Networks. “The risk of this issue is greatly reduced if you secure access to the User-ID™ Authentication Portal per the best practice guidelines by restricting access to only trusted internal IP addresses.”

This week, Palo Alto Networks has warned that the critical PAN-OS vulnerability CVE-2026-0300 is actively exploited in the wild.

Below is the list of impacted products:

VersionsAffectedUnaffected
Cloud NGFWNoneAll
PAN-OS 12.1< 12.1.4-h5
< 12.1.7
>= 12.1.4-h5 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 12.1.7 (ETA: 05/28)
PAN-OS 11.2< 11.2.4-h17
< 11.2.7-h13
< 11.2.10-h6
< 11.2.12
>= 11.2.4-h17 (ETA: 05/28)
>= 11.2.7-h13 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 11.2.10-h6 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 11.2.12 (ETA: 05/28)
PAN-OS 11.1< 11.1.4-h33
< 11.1.6-h32
< 11.1.7-h6
< 11.1.10-h25
< 11.1.13-h5
< 11.1.15
>= 11.1.4-h33 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 11.1.6-h32 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 11.1.7-h6 (ETA: 05/28)
>= 11.1.10-h25 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 11.1.13-h5 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 11.1.15 (ETA: 05/28)
PAN-OS 10.2< 10.2.7-h34
< 10.2.10-h36
< 10.2.13-h21
< 10.2.16-h7
< 10.2.18-h6
>= 10.2.7-h34 (ETA: 05/28)
>= 10.2.10-h36 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 10.2.13-h21 (ETA: 05/28)
>= 10.2.16-h7 (ETA: 05/28)
>= 10.2.18-h6 (ETA: 05/13)
Prisma AccessNoneAll

The cybersecurity vendor states that the issue doesn’t impact Prisma Access, Cloud NGFW and Panorama appliances.

Palo Alto Networks says the flaw is being exploited in a limited way, mainly against systems where the User-ID Authentication Portal is exposed to the public internet.

The flaw remains unpatched, with fixes expected from May 13, 2026. It affects PA-Series and VM-Series firewalls using the User-ID Authentication Portal. Palo Alto Networks notes risk is much lower for organizations that follow best practices, like limiting access to trusted internal networks only.

“Limited exploitation has been observed targeting Palo Alto Networks User-ID™ Authentication Portals that are exposed to untrusted IP addresses and/or the public internet.” concludes the advisory. “Customers following standard security best practices, such as restricting sensitive portals to trusted internal networks are at a greatly reduced risk.”

EarthWorm is an open-source tunneling tool written in C that works across Windows, Linux, macOS, and ARM/MIPS platforms. It acts as a SOCKS5 proxy and port-forwarding utility, enabling attackers to create covert communication channels, bypass network restrictions, and move laterally within compromised environments. Its features include forward and reverse SOCKS5 tunnels, port bridging, traffic forwarding, and multi-hop tunneling for protocols such as RDP and SSH. The tool has previously been linked to threat groups including Volt Typhoon and APT41.

ReverseSocks5 is another open-source networking tool designed to bypass firewalls and NAT protections by creating outbound connections from compromised systems to attacker-controlled servers. Once connected, it establishes a SOCKS5 proxy tunnel that allows remote access into the internal network. While commonly used by administrators for legitimate remote management, threat actors also abuse it for stealthy pivoting and post-compromise operations.

“The reliance of the attackers behind CL-STA-1132 on open-source tooling, rather than proprietary malware, minimized signature-based detection and facilitated seamless environment integration. This technical choice, combined with a disciplined operational cadence of intermittent interactive sessions over a multi-week period, intentionally remained below the behavioral thresholds of most automated alerting systems.” concludes Palo Alto Networks. “The lateral movement technique prioritized identity trust abuse over traditional network-layer pivoting, effectively reducing the attacker’s footprint. Consequently, this campaign demonstrates that operational restraint—specifically the use of non-persistent access windows—is a primary factor in maintaining long-term residency on edge infrastructure.”

Follow me on Twitter: @securityaffairs and Facebook and Mastodon

Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, PAN-OS)

Antes de ontemStream principal
  • ✇Security Affairs
  • Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS flaw exploited for remote code execution Pierluigi Paganini
    Palo Alto Networks warns of a critical PAN-OS flaw (CVE-2026-0300) that is under active attack, allowing unauthenticated remote code execution. Palo Alto Networks has warned that a critical PAN-OS vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2026-0300 (CVSS score of 9.3), is actively exploited in the wild. The flaw is a buffer overflow that allows unauthenticated remote code execution, especially when the User-ID portal is exposed to the internet. “A buffer overflow vulnerability in the User-ID Authent
     

Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS flaw exploited for remote code execution

6 de Maio de 2026, 05:52

Palo Alto Networks warns of a critical PAN-OS flaw (CVE-2026-0300) that is under active attack, allowing unauthenticated remote code execution.

Palo Alto Networks has warned that a critical PAN-OS vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2026-0300 (CVSS score of 9.3), is actively exploited in the wild. The flaw is a buffer overflow that allows unauthenticated remote code execution, especially when the User-ID portal is exposed to the internet.

“A buffer overflow vulnerability in the User-ID™ Authentication Portal (aka Captive Portal) service of Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS software allows an unauthenticated attacker to execute arbitrary code with root privileges on the PA-Series and VM-Series firewalls by sending specially crafted packets.” reads the advisory published by Palo Alto Networks. “The risk of this issue is greatly reduced if you secure access to the User-ID™ Authentication Portal per the best practice guidelines by restricting access to only trusted internal IP addresses.”

Below is the list of impacted products:

VersionsAffectedUnaffected
Cloud NGFWNoneAll
PAN-OS 12.1< 12.1.4-h5
< 12.1.7
>= 12.1.4-h5 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 12.1.7 (ETA: 05/28)
PAN-OS 11.2< 11.2.4-h17
< 11.2.7-h13
< 11.2.10-h6
< 11.2.12
>= 11.2.4-h17 (ETA: 05/28)
>= 11.2.7-h13 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 11.2.10-h6 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 11.2.12 (ETA: 05/28)
PAN-OS 11.1< 11.1.4-h33
< 11.1.6-h32
< 11.1.7-h6
< 11.1.10-h25
< 11.1.13-h5
< 11.1.15
>= 11.1.4-h33 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 11.1.6-h32 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 11.1.7-h6 (ETA: 05/28)
>= 11.1.10-h25 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 11.1.13-h5 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 11.1.15 (ETA: 05/28)
PAN-OS 10.2< 10.2.7-h34
< 10.2.10-h36
< 10.2.13-h21
< 10.2.16-h7
< 10.2.18-h6
>= 10.2.7-h34 (ETA: 05/28)
>= 10.2.10-h36 (ETA: 05/13)
>= 10.2.13-h21 (ETA: 05/28)
>= 10.2.16-h7 (ETA: 05/28)
>= 10.2.18-h6 (ETA: 05/13)
Prisma AccessNoneAll

The cybersecurity vendor states that the issue doesn’t impact Prisma Access, Cloud NGFW and Panorama appliances.

Palo Alto Networks says the flaw is being exploited in a limited way, mainly against systems where the User-ID Authentication Portal is exposed to the public internet.

The flaw remains unpatched, with fixes expected from May 13, 2026. It affects PA-Series and VM-Series firewalls using the User-ID Authentication Portal. Palo Alto Networks notes risk is much lower for organizations that follow best practices, like limiting access to trusted internal networks only.

“Limited exploitation has been observed targeting Palo Alto Networks User-ID™ Authentication Portals that are exposed to untrusted IP addresses and/or the public internet.” concludes the advisory. “Customers following standard security best practices, such as restricting sensitive portals to trusted internal networks are at a greatly reduced risk.”

Follow me on Twitter: @securityaffairs and Facebook and Mastodon

Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, PAN-OS)

  • ✇Firewall Daily – The Cyber Express
  • PAN-OS Flaw CVE-2026-0300 Exposes Firewalls to Remote Code Execution Ashish Khaitan
    A newly disclosed cybersecurity issue, tracked as CVE-2026-0300, has drawn urgent attention due to its critical severity and active exploitation. The flaw affects PAN-OS, the operating system used in Palo Alto Networks firewalls, and has been categorized as a buffer overflow vulnerability with serious implications for enterprise security environments.  The CVE-2026-0300 PAN-OS vulnerability was officially published on May 6, 2026, and updated the same day after being discovered in real-world
     

PAN-OS Flaw CVE-2026-0300 Exposes Firewalls to Remote Code Execution

Buffer Overflow Vulnerability

A newly disclosed cybersecurity issue, tracked as CVE-2026-0300, has drawn urgent attention due to its critical severity and active exploitation. The flaw affects PAN-OS, the operating system used in Palo Alto Networks firewalls, and has been categorized as a buffer overflow vulnerability with serious implications for enterprise security environments.  The CVE-2026-0300 PAN-OS vulnerability was officially published on May 6, 2026, and updated the same day after being discovered in real-world production environments. It carries a CVSS score of 9.3, placing it firmly in the “critical” category. The issue stems from a buffer overflow vulnerability in the User-ID Authentication Portal, also known as the Captive Portal service, within PAN-OS.  This flaw allows an unauthenticated attacker to execute arbitrary code with root privileges by sending specially crafted network packets. Because the attack requires no authentication, no user interaction, and can be carried out over the network with low complexity, the exposure risk is considered extremely high. 

Technical Details of the Buffer Overflow Vulnerability in PAN-OS 

The root cause of CVE-2026-0300 PAN-OS is classified under CWE-787: Out-of-bounds Write, a common but dangerous type of buffer overflow vulnerability. Attackers can exploit this flaw to overwrite memory and potentially take full control of affected systems.  The vulnerability impacts PA-Series and VM-Series firewalls when the User-ID™ Authentication Portal is enabled. Importantly, Prisma Access, Cloud NGFW, and Panorama appliances are not affected.  Security data associated with the vulnerability highlights the following: 
  • Attack Vector: Network  
  • Attack Complexity: Low  
  • Privileges Required: None  
  • User Interaction: None  
  • Confidentiality, Integrity, Availability Impact: High  
Additionally, the vulnerability is automatable and has already reached the “ATTACKED” stage in exploit maturity, indicating that real-world attacks have been observed. 

Active Exploitation and Risk Factors 

Evidence shows limited exploitation of CVE-2026-0300 PAN-OS, particularly targeting systems where the User-ID Authentication Portal is exposed to untrusted networks or the public internet. Environments that allow external access to this portal face the highest level of risk. The severity is further highlighted by the CVSS vector:  CVSS:4.0/AV:N/AC:L/AT:N/PR:N/UI:N/VC:H/VI:H/VA:H  This translates to a scenario where attackers can remotely compromise systems without needing credentials or user involvement, leveraging the buffer overflow vulnerability to gain root-level access. 

Affected and Unaffected Versions 

Multiple versions of PAN-OS are impacted by CVE-2026-0300, including: 
  • PAN-OS 12.1 versions prior to 12.1.4-h5 and 12.1.7  
  • PAN-OS 11.2 versions prior to 11.2.4-h17, 11.2.7-h13, 11.2.10-h6, and 11.2.12  
  • PAN-OS 11.1 versions prior to 11.1.4-h33, 11.1.6-h32, 11.1.7-h6, 11.1.10-h25, 11.1.13-h5, and 11.1.15  
  • PAN-OS 10.2 versions prior to 10.2.7-h34, 10.2.10-h36, 10.2.13-h21, 10.2.16-h7, and 10.2.18-h6  
Patches are scheduled with estimated availability dates ranging from May 13 to May 28, 2026. Cloud NGFW and Prisma Access deployments remain unaffected. 

Mitigation and Workarounds 

While patches are being rolled out, organizations are advised to take immediate steps to reduce exposure to the buffer overflow vulnerability in PAN-OS.  Recommended mitigations include: 
  • Restricting access to the User-ID Authentication Portal to trusted internal IP addresses only  
  • Preventing any exposure of the portal to the public internet  
  • Disabling the User-ID Authentication Portal entirely if it is not required  
The risk associated with CVE-2026-0300 PAN-OS drops significantly when these best practices are implemented. Systems that already follow strict network segmentation and access control policies are at a much lower risk. 
❌
❌