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Scrape Timestamp (UTC): 2025-03-12 11:59:00.085
Source: https://thehackernews.com/2025/03/over-400-ips-exploiting-multiple-ssrf.html
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Over 400 IPs Exploiting Multiple SSRF Vulnerabilities in Coordinated Cyber Attack. Threat intelligence firm GreyNoise is warning of a "coordinated surge" in the exploitation of Server-Side Request Forgery (SSRF) vulnerabilities spanning multiple platforms. "At least 400 IPs have been seen actively exploiting multiple SSRF CVEs simultaneously, with notable overlap between attack attempts," the company said, adding it observed the activity on March 9, 2025. The countries which have emerged as the target of SSRF exploitation attempts include the United States, Germany, Singapore, India, Lithuania, and Japan. Another notable country is Israel, which has witnessed a surge on March 11, 2025. The list of SSRF vulnerabilities being exploited are listed below - GreyNoise said that many of the same IP addresses are targeting multiple SSRF flaws at once rather than focusing on one particular weakness, noting the pattern of activity suggests structured exploitation, automation, or pre-compromise intelligence gathering. In light of active exploitation attempts, it's essential that users apply the latest patches, limit outbound connections to necessary endpoints, and monitor for suspicious outbound requests. "Many modern cloud services rely on internal metadata APIs, which SSRF can access if exploited," GreyNoise said. "SSRF can be used to map internal networks, locate vulnerable services, and steal cloud credentials."
Daily Brief Summary
GreyNoise intelligence firm reports a coordinated spike in SSRF vulnerability exploitation on March 9, 2025.
Attackers have targeted multiple countries, including the U.S., Germany, Singapore, India, Lithuania, Japan, and Israel.
At least 400 IP addresses actively exploiting various SSRF CVEs; many IPs target different vulnerabilities concurrently.
This pattern suggests that the activities are likely structured, involve automation, or are part of pre-compromise scouting.
SSRF attacks enable perpetrators to map internal networks, access vulnerable services, and steal credentials from cloud services.
Experts highlight the necessity for immediate application of latest patches, restriction of unnecessary outbound connections, and vigilance against suspicious outbound requests.