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    Home»Development»MintsLoader Drops GhostWeaver via Phishing, ClickFix — Uses DGA, TLS for Stealth Attacks

    MintsLoader Drops GhostWeaver via Phishing, ClickFix — Uses DGA, TLS for Stealth Attacks

    May 2, 2025

    The malware loader known as MintsLoader has been used to deliver a PowerShell-based remote access trojan called GhostWeaver.
    “MintsLoader operates through a multi-stage infection chain involving obfuscated JavaScript and PowerShell scripts,” Recorded Future’s Insikt Group said in a report shared with The Hacker News.
    “The malware employs sandbox and virtual machine evasion techniques, a domain

    Source: Read More

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    CVE-2025-6694 – LabRedesCefetRJ WeGIA Cross-Site Scripting Vulnerability

    Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs)

    Highlights

    CVE-2025-4143 – Cloudflare Workers-OAuth-Provider OAuth Redirect URI Validation Bypass

    May 1, 2025

    CVE ID : CVE-2025-4143

    Published : May 1, 2025, 1:15 a.m. | 1 hour, 54 minutes ago

    Description : The OAuth implementation in workers-oauth-provider that is part of MCP framework https://github.com/cloudflare/workers-mcp , did not correctly validate that redirect_uri was on the allowed list of redirect URIs for the given client registration.

    Fixed in:  https://github.com/cloudflare/workers-oauth-provider/pull/26 https://github.com/cloudflare/workers-oauth-provider/pull/26

    Impact:

    Under certain circumstances (see below), if a victim had previously authorized with a server built on workers-oath-provider, and an attacker could later trick the victim into visiting a malicious web site, then attacker could potentially steal the victim’s credentials to the same OAuth server and subsequently impersonate them.

    In order for the attack to be possible, the OAuth server’s authorized callback must be designed to auto-approve authorizations that appear to come from an OAuth client that the victim has authorized previously. The authorization flow is not implemented by workers-oauth-provider; it is up to the application built on top to decide whether to implement such automatic re-authorization. However, many applications do implement such logic.

    Note: It is a basic, well-known requirement that OAuth servers should verify that the redirect URI is among the allowed list for the client, both during the authorization flow and subsequently when exchanging the authorization code for an access token. workers-oauth-provider implemented only the latter check, not the former. Unfortunately, the former is the much more important check. Readers who are familiar with OAuth may recognize that failing to check redirect URIs against the allowed list is a well-known, basic mistake, covered extensively in the RFC and elsewhere. The author of this library would like everyone to know that he was, in fact, well-aware of this requirement, thought about it a lot while designing the library, and then, somehow, forgot to actually make sure the check was in the code. That is, it’s not that he didn’t know what he was doing, it’s that he knew what he was doing but flubbed it.

    Severity: 0.0 | NA

    Visit the link for more details, such as CVSS details, affected products, timeline, and more…

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