Delta Electronics Patches Serious Flaws in Industrial Networking Devices


Taiwan-based Delta Electronics has patched potentially serious vulnerabilities in two of its industrial networking products.

Taiwan-based Delta Electronics has patched potentially serious vulnerabilities in two of its industrial networking products.

The flaws were identified by researchers at CyberDanube, a new industrial cybersecurity company based in Austria, in Delta’s DX-2100-L1-CN 3G cloud router and the DVW-W02W2-E2 industrial wireless access point.

The researchers conducted their analysis on so-called digital twins, which involve virtualization techniques, rather than by looking at the actual devices.

In the 3G router, they discovered an authenticated command injection issue and a stored cross-site scripting (XSS) flaw. The command injection vulnerability can allow an attacker who has credentials for the web service to execute system commands on the OS with root privileges.

While exploitation of the security hole requires authentication, CyberDanube founder and technical director Thomas Weber told SecurityWeek that the XSS vulnerability could be leveraged by an attacker to bypass the authentication requirement.

In the case of the Delta access point, CyberDanube researchers discovered an authenticated command injection vulnerability.

“[The vulnerability] allows an attacker to gain full access to the underlying operating system of the device with all implications. If such a device is acting as a key device in an industrial network, or controls various critical equipment via serial ports, more extensive damage in the corresponding network can be done by an attacker,” CyberDanube said in an advisory published on Wednesday.

Weber explained that in the case of this vulnerability an attacker could obtain the credentials required for exploitation by doing ARP spoofing on the network or thorough brute-force attacks, noting that the difficulty of obtaining the credentials generally depends on the strength of the password.

The vulnerabilities, both rated ‘high impact’ by CyberDanube, were reported to the vendor in August and firmware patches were released in November. The cybersecurity firm has released advisories with technical details for both products (DX-2100-L1-CN and DVW-W02W2-E2).

Vulnerabilities affecting products from Delta Electronics should not be ignored. In August, the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) warned that a flaw affecting industrial automation software made by the company had been exploited in attacks.


By Eduard Kovacs on Wed, 30 Nov 2022 12:39:07 +0000
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