Skip to content
  • Home
  • Cyber Map
  • About Us – Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms and Rules
  • Privacy Policy
Cyber Web Spider Blog – News

Cyber Web Spider Blog – News

Globe Threat Map provides a real-time, interactive 3D visualization of global cyber threats. Monitor DDoS attacks, malware, and hacking attempts with geo-located arcs on a rotating globe. Stay informed with live logs and archive stats.

  • Home
  • Cyber Map
  • Cyber Security News
  • Security Week News
  • The Hacker News
  • How To?
  • Toggle search form
Zoom and GitLab Release Security Updates Fixing RCE, DoS, and 2FA Bypass Flaws

Zoom and GitLab Release Security Updates Fixing RCE, DoS, and 2FA Bypass Flaws

Posted on January 21, 2026January 21, 2026 By CWS

Ravie LakshmananJan 21, 2026Vulnerability / Community Safety

Zoom and GitLab have launched safety updates to resolve plenty of safety vulnerabilities that might end in denial-of-service (DoS) and distant code execution.
Essentially the most extreme of the lot is a vital safety flaw impacting Zoom Node Multimedia Routers (MMRs) that might allow a gathering participant to conduct distant code execution assaults. The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2026-22844 and found internally by its Offensive Safety group, carries a CVSS rating of 9.9 out of 10.0.
“A command injection vulnerability in Zoom Node Multimedia Routers (MMRs) earlier than model 5.2.1716.0 might enable a gathering participant to conduct distant code execution of the MMR by way of community entry,” the corporate famous in a Tuesday alert.
Zoom is recommending that clients utilizing Zoom Node Conferences, Hybrid, or Assembly Connector deployments replace to the newest obtainable MMR model to safeguard in opposition to any potential risk.

There is no such thing as a proof that the safety flaw has been exploited within the wild. The vulnerability impacts the next variations –

Zoom Node Conferences Hybrid (ZMH) MMR module variations prior to five.2.1716.0
Zoom Node Assembly Connector (MC) MMR module variations prior to five.2.1716.0

GitLab Releases Patches for Extreme Flaws
The disclosure comes as GitLab launched fixes for a number of high-severity flaws affecting its Group Version (CE) and Enterprise Version (EE) that might end in DoS and a bypass of two-factor authentication (2FA) protections. The shortcomings are listed beneath –

CVE-2025-13927 (CVSS rating: 7.5) – A vulnerability that might enable an unauthenticated consumer to create a DoS situation by sending crafted requests with malformed authentication knowledge (Impacts all variations from 11.9 earlier than 18.6.4, 18.7 earlier than 18.7.2, and 18.8 earlier than 18.8.2)
CVE-2025-13928 (CVSS rating: 7.5) – An incorrect authorization vulnerability within the Releases API that might enable an unauthenticated consumer to trigger a DoS situation (Impacts all variations from 17.7 earlier than 18.6.4, 18.7 earlier than 18.7.2, and 18.8 earlier than 18.8.2)
CVE-2026-0723 (CVSS rating: 7.4) – A vulnerability that might enable a person with present information of a sufferer’s credential ID to bypass 2FA by submitting cast gadget responses (Impacts all variations from 18.6 earlier than 18.6.4, 18.7 earlier than 18.7.2, and 18.8 earlier than 18.8.2 )

Additionally remediated by GitLab are two different medium-severity bugs that might additionally set off a DoS situation (CVE-2025-13335, CVSS rating: 6.5, and CVE-2026-1102, CVSS rating: 5.3) by configuring malformed Wiki paperwork that bypass cycle detection and sending repeated malformed SSH authentication requests, respectively.

The Hacker News Tags:2FA, Bypass, DoS, Fixing, Flaws, GitLab, RCE, Release, Security, Updates, Zoom

Post navigation

Previous Post: New Magecart Attack Inject Malicious JavaScript to Skim Payment Data
Next Post: Research Finds 64% of Third-Party Apps Access Sensitive Data

Related Posts

Compromised IAM Credentials Power a Large AWS Crypto Mining Campaign Compromised IAM Credentials Power a Large AWS Crypto Mining Campaign The Hacker News
Hidden Logic Bombs in Malware-Laced NuGet Packages Set to Detonate Years After Installation Hidden Logic Bombs in Malware-Laced NuGet Packages Set to Detonate Years After Installation The Hacker News
Google Adds Multi-Layered Defenses to Secure GenAI from Prompt Injection Attacks Google Adds Multi-Layered Defenses to Secure GenAI from Prompt Injection Attacks The Hacker News
New ClickFix Campaign Exploits Sites for MIMICRAT Deployment New ClickFix Campaign Exploits Sites for MIMICRAT Deployment The Hacker News
AI-Powered Slopoly Malware Boosts Hive0163’s Ransomware Tactics AI-Powered Slopoly Malware Boosts Hive0163’s Ransomware Tactics The Hacker News
3 SOC Challenges You Need to Solve Before 2026 3 SOC Challenges You Need to Solve Before 2026 The Hacker News

Categories

  • Cyber Security News
  • How To?
  • Security Week News
  • The Hacker News

Recent Posts

  • Critical Vulnerability in MongoDB Risks Data Exposure
  • Windows Zero-Day Exploits: YellowKey and GreenPlasma Revealed
  • Fragnesia Linux Kernel Vulnerability Allows Root Access
  • NGINX Vulnerability Allows Remote Code Execution
  • Critical 18-Year NGINX Vulnerability Enables Remote Code Execution

Pages

  • About Us – Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Rules

Archives

  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025

Recent Posts

  • Critical Vulnerability in MongoDB Risks Data Exposure
  • Windows Zero-Day Exploits: YellowKey and GreenPlasma Revealed
  • Fragnesia Linux Kernel Vulnerability Allows Root Access
  • NGINX Vulnerability Allows Remote Code Execution
  • Critical 18-Year NGINX Vulnerability Enables Remote Code Execution

Pages

  • About Us – Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Rules

Categories

  • Cyber Security News
  • How To?
  • Security Week News
  • The Hacker News

Copyright © 2026 Cyber Web Spider Blog – News.

Powered by PressBook Masonry Dark