Hacked WordPress Sites Abusing Visitors' Browsers for Distributed Brute-Force Attacks
Threat actors are conducting brute-force attacks against WordPress sites by leveraging malicious JavaScript injections, new findings from Sucuri reveal
WordPress is a content management platform whose core, plugins, and themes can contain vulnerabilities that expose websites, accounts, and data.
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Background for this topic.
WordPress is an open-source content management system (CMS) used to publish and manage websites. A site typically combines WordPress core with independently developed plugins and themes, which extend functionality but create a diverse and changing software supply chain. Its security therefore depends not only on the core software, but also on the quality, maintenance, and configuration of those extensions.
Security-relevant issues include exploitable vulnerabilities in core, plugins, or themes; weak or reused administrator credentials; and exposed or poorly configured administrative and API interfaces. Attackers may use these paths to alter content, install malicious code, or access site data. Administrators should track advisories and affected versions, apply updates through a controlled process, remove unsupported extensions, enforce strong authentication and least privilege, and keep protected, tested backups. Monitoring and log review help identify unauthorized changes and support recovery when compromise is suspected.
Threat actors are conducting brute-force attacks against WordPress sites by leveraging malicious JavaScript injections, new findings from Sucuri reveal
Hackers are conducting widescale attacks on WordPress sites to inject scripts that force visitors' browsers to bruteforce passwords for other sites. [...]