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Hackers exploit newly patched Fortinet auth bypass flaws

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Hackers are exploiting critical-severity vulnerabilities affecting multiple Fortinet products to get unauthorized access to admin accounts and steal system configuration files.

The two vulnerabilities are tracked as CVE-2025-59718 and CVE-2025-59719, and Fortinet warned in an advisory on December 9 about the potential for exploitation.

CVE-2025-59718 is a FortiCloud SSO authentication bypass affecting FortiOS, FortiProxy, and FortiSwitchManager. It is caused by improper verification of cryptographic signatures in SAML messages, allowing an attacker to log in without valid authentication by submitting a maliciously crafted SAML assertion.

CVE-2025-59719 is a FortiCloud SSO authentication bypass affecting FortiWeb. It arises from a similar issue with the cryptographic signature validation of SAML messages, enabling unauthenticated administrative access via forged SSO.

Both issues are only exploitable if FortiCloud SSO is enabled, which is not the default setting. However, unless the feature is explicitly disabled, it is activated automatically when registering devices through the FortiCare user interface.

Targeting admin accounts

Researchers at cybersecurity company Arctic Wolf observed attacks exploiting the two security vulnerabilities starting on December 12. They note that the intrusions originated from several IP addresses linked to The Constant Company, BL Networks, and Kaopu Cloud HK.

Based on Arctic Wolf observations, the attackers targeted admin accounts with malicious single sign-on logins (SSO), as seen in the log below:

Log showing authentication bypass
Source: Arctic Wolf

After obtaining admin-level access, the hackers accessed the web management interface and performed actions such as downloading the system’s configuration files.

Malicious actions log
Source: Arctic Wolf

Configuration files can expose network layouts, internet-facing services, firewall policies, potentially vulnerable interfaces, routing tables, and also hashed passwords that may be cracked if weak.

The exfiltration of these files suggests that the activity is not from researchers mapping vulnerable endpoints, as exploitation is part of a malicious operation that may support future attacks.

Blocking the attacks

The two flaws impact multiple versions of Fortinet products except for FortiOS 6.4, FortiWeb 7.0, and FortiWeb 7.2.

To prevent attacks, Fortinet recommends that admins still running a vulnerable version temporarily disable the FortiCloud login feature until an upgrade to a safer version is possible.

This can be done from System → Settings → “Allow administrative login using FortiCloud SSO” = Off.

System administrators are recommended to move to one of the following versions that address both vulnerabilities:

FortiOS 7.6.4+, 7.4.9+, 7.2.12+, and 7.0.18+
FortiProxy 7.6.4+, 7.4.11+, 7.2.15+, 7.0.22+
FortiSwitchManager 7.2.7+, 7.0.6+
FortiWeb 8.0.1+, 7.6.5+, 7.4.10+

If any signs of compromise are discovered, it is recommended to rotate firewall credentials as soon as possible. Arctic Wolf also recommends limiting firewall/VPN management access to trusted internal networks only.

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