CISA Releases Guidance on Network Access, VPNs
In this guidance, CISA outlines how modern cybersecurity relies on network visibility to defend against threats and o scams.
A VPN creates an encrypted tunnel between devices and a remote network, making its configuration and flaws important to privacy and access control.
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Background for this topic.
VPN (virtual private network) creates an encrypted tunnel between a device and a VPN gateway, or between networks, across an untrusted network such as the internet. It is commonly used for remote access and site-to-site connectivity. Encryption protects traffic in transit between the tunnel endpoints, but it does not secure a compromised device, protect data after it reaches the destination, or automatically make the VPN provider trustworthy; logging and traffic visibility depend on its configuration and operator.
VPN gateways are high-value entry points: vulnerabilities in internet-facing appliances, weak protocols or configurations, and stolen credentials can enable unauthorized access to internal systems. Organizations should patch and securely configure gateways, require phishing-resistant or otherwise strong multi-factor authentication where practical, restrict access and segment remote sessions, and monitor authentication and connection logs. During an incident, VPN account and gateway records can help identify access, while compromised gateways may require credential resets and network-wide review.
In this guidance, CISA outlines how modern cybersecurity relies on network visibility to defend against threats and o scams.
Espionage Group Used SoftEther VPN Client to Exploit Targeted NetworksA Chinese state-sponsored group, tracked as RedJuliett, is using open-source VPN client SoftEther to target the infrastructure of about 75 organizations in government, academic and technology sectors in multiple countries. Most of the attacks appear to target Taiwan.