Hackers Now Faster At Exploiting Bugs

Share post:

The average time to exploit bugs has gone down from 42 days in 2020 to 21 days in 2021.

According to Rapid7’s new 2021 Vulnerability Intelligence Report, this signifies a 71% decrease in ‘time to known exploitation.”

Rapid7’s report highlights several startling trends including the fact that 52% of widespread threats started with a zero-day exploit. Unlike the past few years, 85% of zero-day exploits in 2021 targeted many organizations rather than just a few.

The increase in zero-day attacks is fuelled by the proliferation of affiliates supporting the ransomware industry, which is now dominated by the ransomware-as-a-service model.

In 2021, Rapid7 tracked 33 flaws considered to be “widespread,” 10 flaws “exploited in the wild,” 7 “impending” flaws.

The “widespread” flaws include enterprise software from SAP, Zyxel, SonicWall, Accession, VMware, Microsoft Exchange (the ProxyLogon bugs), F5, GitLan, Pulse Connect, QNAP, Forgerock, Microsoft Windows, Kaseya, SolarWinds, Atlassian, Zoho, Apache HTTP Server, and Apache Log4j.

The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency’s constant update of flaws and patch warnings have however been significant in bringing these flaws into the limelight.

For more information, read the original story in ZDNet.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Related articles

Cyber Security Today, Week in Review for week ending Friday May 17, 2024

Welcome to Cyber Security Today. This is the Week in Review for the week ending Friday, May 17th,...

Cyber Security Today, May 17, 2024 – Malware hiding in Apache Tomcat servers

Malware hiding in Apache Tomcat servers, new backdoors found, and more Welcome to Cyber Security Today. It's Friday, May...

MIT students exploit blockchain vulnerability to steal 25 million dollars

Two MIT students have been implicated in a highly sophisticated cryptocurrency heist, where they reportedly exploited a vulnerability...

Cyber Security Today, May 15, 2024 – Ebury botnet still exploits Linux servers, Microsoft, SAP and Apple issue security updates

The Ebury botnet continues to exploit Linux servers, Microsoft, SAP and Apple issue security updates, and more. Welcome to...

Become a member

New, Relevant Tech Stories. Our article selection is done by industry professionals. Our writers summarize them to give you the key takeaways