CISA orders feds to patch Zimbra XSS flaw exploited in attacks
CISA has ordered U.S. government agencies to secure their servers against an actively exploited vulnerability in the Zimbra Collaboration Suite (ZCS). [...]
XSS lets attackers run scripts in a victim's browser, enabling data theft or account abuse; contextual output encoding and CSP reduce risk.
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Background for this topic.
Cross-site scripting (XSS) is a web-application flaw in which attacker-controlled input is interpreted as script in another user’s browser. It can be stored in application data, reflected in an immediate response, or introduced by unsafe client-side code (DOM-based XSS). The script runs in the affected site’s origin, so it may read page content, alter requests, or perform actions available to the victim; impact depends on the victim’s privileges and the application’s defenses.
The primary mitigation is context-aware output encoding: treat untrusted data as text when inserting it into HTML, attributes, URLs, JavaScript, or CSS, and use safe DOM APIs such as textContent rather than unsafe HTML insertion. If user-authored HTML is required, apply a well-tested HTML sanitizer. A restrictive Content Security Policy can limit exploitability but is defense in depth, not a substitute for correct encoding. HttpOnly cookies can reduce direct cookie theft, but do not prevent XSS from performing in-session actions.
CISA has ordered U.S. government agencies to secure their servers against an actively exploited vulnerability in the Zimbra Collaboration Suite (ZCS). [...]