Tuesday, November 12, 2024
HomeCVE/vulnerabilityVMware Urges to Remove Enhanced EAP Plugin to Stop Auth & Session...

VMware Urges to Remove Enhanced EAP Plugin to Stop Auth & Session Hijack Attacks

Published on

Malware protection

VMware has issued an urgent advisory to administrators to remove a deprecated authentication plugin vulnerable to severe security threats.

The Enhanced Authentication Plugin (EAP), which provided seamless login capabilities to vSphere’s management interfaces, is susceptible to authentication relay and session hijack attacks due to two unpatched security vulnerabilities.

Critical Vulnerabilities Identified

The two vulnerabilities, CVE-2024-22245 and CVE-2024-22250, pose significant risks to Windows domain environments.

- Advertisement - SIEM as a Service

CVE-2024-22245, with a CVSS score of 9.6, allows a malicious actor to relay Kerberos service tickets, potentially leading to the takeover of privileged EAP sessions. 

CVE-2024-22250, scored at 7.8, enables an attacker with local access to hijack an EAP session initiated by a privileged domain user.

These vulnerabilities were discovered by Ceri Coburn from Pen Test Partners and reported to VMware, which has acknowledged the critical nature of these flaws.

Arbitrary Authentication Relay Vulnerability (CVE-2024-22245)

A vulnerability known as the Arbitrary Authentication Relay is present in the VMware Enhanced Authentication Plug-in (EAP).

With a maximum CVSSv3 base score of 9.6, VMware has determined that the severity of this issue falls into the Critical severity range.

By installing EAP on a target domain user’s web browser, a malicious actor might fool them into requesting and transmitting service tickets for any Active Directory Service Principal Name (SPN).

Session Hijack Vulnerability (CVE-2024-22250)

The VMware Enhanced Authentication Plug-in (EAP) has a security hole that could allow unauthorized users to hijack sessions.

This vulnerability has a maximum CVSSv3 base score of 7.8, which VMware has classified as of critical severity.

A privileged domain user on the same machine can start a privileged identity management, but an attacker with unprivileged local access to Windows can hijack it.

Impact on Users and Organizations

The deprecated EAP is not installed by default and is not part of VMware’s core products like vCenter Server, ESXi, or Cloud Foundation.

However, it may have been manually installed on Windows workstations used for administrative tasks.

These vulnerabilities in the EAP can put organizations at risk of unauthorized access and control over their virtualized environments, potentially leading to data breaches and system disruptions.

VMware’s Response and Recommendations

VMware has decided not to patch the EAP due to its deprecation and the associated security risks of bypassing modern web browser security features. 

Instead, VMware recommends completely removing the EAP to secure systems against potential attacks.

The company has provided PowerShell commands to uninstall the plugin and the associated Windows service.

To Uninstall

(Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Product | Where-Object{$_.Name.StartsWith("VMware Plug-in Service")}).Uninstall()

Stop and disable the Windows service

Option 1 – Batch/CMD

sc stop CipMsgProxyService
sc config CipMsgProxyService start= disabled

Option 2 – Powershell

Stop-Service-Name"CipMsgProxyService"
Set-Service-Name"CipMsgProxyService"-StartupType"Disabled"

VMware suggests using other authentication methods such as Active Directory over LDAPS, Microsoft Active Directory Federation Services (ADFS), Okta, and Microsoft Entra ID24 as alternatives to the vulnerable plugin.

VMware’s advisory underscores the importance of maintaining up-to-date and secure authentication mechanisms.

Organizations using the EAP should take immediate action to remove the plugin and switch to supported authentication methods to protect their environments from potential exploitation.

Stay updated on Cybersecurity news, Whitepapers, and Infographics. Follow us on LinkedIn & Twitter.

Gurubaran
Gurubaran
Gurubaran is a co-founder of Cyber Security News and GBHackers On Security. He has 10+ years of experience as a Security Consultant, Editor, and Analyst in cybersecurity, technology, and communications.

Latest articles

10 Best DNS Management Tools – 2025

Best DNS Management Tools play a crucial role in efficiently managing domain names and...

Sweet Security Announces Availability of its Cloud Native Detection & Response Platform on the AWS Marketplace

Customers can now easily integrate Sweet’s runtime detection and response platform into their AWS...

Researchers Detailed Credential Abuse Cycle

Cybercriminals exploit leaked credentials, obtained through various means, to compromise systems and data, enabling...

New Android Malware SpyAgent Taking Screenshots Of User’s Devices

SpyAgent, a newly discovered Android malware, leverages OCR technology to extract cryptocurrency recovery phrases...

Free Webinar

Protect Websites & APIs from Malware Attack

Malware targeting customer-facing websites and API applications poses significant risks, including compliance violations, defacements, and even blacklisting.

Join us for an insightful webinar featuring Vivek Gopalan, VP of Products at Indusface, as he shares effective strategies for safeguarding websites and APIs against malware.

Discussion points

Scan DOM, internal links, and JavaScript libraries for hidden malware.
Detect website defacements in real time.
Protect your brand by monitoring for potential blacklisting.
Prevent malware from infiltrating your server and cloud infrastructure.

More like this

Researchers Detailed Credential Abuse Cycle

Cybercriminals exploit leaked credentials, obtained through various means, to compromise systems and data, enabling...

New Android Malware SpyAgent Taking Screenshots Of User’s Devices

SpyAgent, a newly discovered Android malware, leverages OCR technology to extract cryptocurrency recovery phrases...

Tor Network Suffers IP Spoofing Attack Via Non-Exit Relays

In late October 2024, a coordinated IP spoofing attack targeted the Tor network, prompting...