Forecast = Router-geddon: Ballista storms brewing with a chance of unforgivable vulnerabilities. Patch umbrella required.

In this episode of Storm ⚡ ️Watch, the crew laments the sorry state of modern edge computing through the lens of Steve Coley's 2007 paper on "Unforgivable Vulnerabilities". The discussion examines security flaws that should never appear in properly developed software yet continue to plague systems today. These vulnerabilities demonstrate a systematic disregard for secure development practices and would be immediately obvious to anyone with basic security awareness. The team breaks down "The Lucky 13" vulnerabilities, including buffer overflows, cross-site scripting, SQL injection, and hard-coded credentials, while also exploring how modern AI tools might inadvertently introduce these same issues into today's codebase, and how one might go about properly and safely use them in coding and security engineering.

The episode also features an in-depth analysis of the newly discovered Ballista botnet that's actively targeting TP-Link Archer routers through a vulnerability discovered two years ago. First detected on January 10, 2025, this botnet has already infected over 6,000 devices worldwide, with the most recent activity observed in mid-February. The threat actors behind Ballista, believed to be based in Italy, have targeted organizations across multiple sectors including manufacturing, healthcare, services, and technology in the US, Australia, China, and Mexico. The botnet exploits CVE-2023-1389 to spread malware that establishes encrypted command and control channels, enabling attackers to launch DDoS attacks and further compromise vulnerable systems.\

The team rounds out the episode with updates from their partner organizations. Censys shares insights on JunOS vulnerabilities and the RedPenguin threat actor, along with an investigation into server misidentification issues. RunZero discusses the importance of cybersecurity labeling for end-of-life and end-of-support consumer IoT devices. GreyNoise alerts listeners to a new surge in SSRF exploitation attempts reminiscent of the 2019 Capital One breach and promotes their upcoming webinar on March 24th.

As always, the Storm⚡️Watch crew delivers actionable intelligence and expert analysis to help security professionals stay ahead of emerging threats in the ever-evolving cybersecurity landscape.

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Link to GreyNoise Twitter account
Link to GreyNoise Twitter account