1.6 million WordPress sites targeted in the last couple of days

Pierluigi Paganini December 10, 2021

Wordfence experts detected a massive wave of attacks in the last couple of days that targeted over 1.6 million WordPress sites.

Wordfence researchers spotted a massive wave of attacks in the days that are targeting over 1.6 million WordPress sites from 16,000 IPs.

“Today, on December 9, 2021, our Threat Intelligence team noticed a drastic uptick in attacks targeting vulnerabilities that make it possible for attackers to update arbitrary options on vulnerable sites. This led us into an investigation which uncovered an active attack targeting over a million WordPress sites.” reads the post published by Wordfence. “Over the past 36 hours, the Wordfence network has blocked over 13.7 million attacks targeting four different plugins and several Epsilon Framework themes across over 1.6 million sites and originating from over 16,000 different IP addresses.”

The attacks are originating from 16,000 IP addresses and are targeting four WordPress plugins and fifteen Epsilon Framework themes.

WordPress attacks

Below is the list of affected plugins:

while the targeted Epsilon Framework themes are:

Below are the top 10 offending IPs observed:

  • 144.91.111.6 with 430,067 attacks blocked.
  • 185.9.156.158 with 277,111 attacks blocked.
  • 195.2.76.246 with 274,574 attacks blocked.
  • 37.187.137.177 with 216,888 attacks blocked.
  • 51.75.123.243 with 205,143 attacks blocked.
  • 185.200.241.249 with 194,979 attacks blocked.
  • 62.171.130.153 with 192,778 attacks blocked.
  • 185.93.181.158 with 181,508 attacks blocked.
  • 188.120.230.132 with 158,873 attacks blocked.
  • 104.251.211.115 with 153,350 attacks blocked.

Experts noticed that in most cases, the threat actors are enabling the users_can_register option and setting the default_role option to administrator. Then the attackers are able to register on any site as an administrator and take over the site.

Site admins could determine if their site has been compromised by reviewing the user accounts on the site to determine if there are any unauthorized user accounts. Indicators of compromise include the presence of a vulnerable version of any of the above plugins or themes along with the presence of a rogue user account.

Researchers recommend removing any rogue accounts and updating your plugins and themes as soon as possible

Experts also recommend reviewing the settings in http://examplesite[.]com/wp-admin/options-general.php page focusing on Membership` and `New User Default Role` settings.

“We strongly recommend ensuring that all of your sites have been updated to the patched versions of the plugins and themes.” concludes the post.

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Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, WordPress)

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