WordPress plugins gone rogue – compromised plugins creating rogue administrator accounts
A recent malvertising campaign targeting vulnerable plugins is now trying to backdoor sites by creating rogue admin accounts.
Back in July when the campaign was first noticed it was attempting to hijack sites to push popup ads, tech support scams, and malicious Android apps.
Plugins targeted in July included vulnerable versions of Coming Soon Page & Maintenance Mode, which followed attacks in April and May on the Yellow Pencil Visual CSS Style Editor and Blog Designer.
Six weeks on, perhaps encouraged by the number of vulnerable sites they found, the attackers have upgraded their attacks to take complete control of sites vulnerable to their attacks.
A new vulnerable plugin, Bold Page Builder, has also been added to the exploitation list, which attackers reportedly started targeting on 22nd August.
Anyone with a vulnerable plugin is now at risk of having their site backdoored by a rogue user account with administrator privileges. As before, the attackers attempt to infect vulnerable sites with malicious JavaScript code that’s run whenever a user visits an affected page.
The moment of weakness occurs if the user:
- Has previously visited an infected page
- Is a WordPress administrator on the infected site
- Is currently logged in to the site
If these conditions are met the code silently abuses the logged-in administrator’s ability to create new users, issuing an AJAX request to create a rogue administrator account named wpservices.
What could the attackers do with the access this rogue account gives them?
Pretty much anything they want.
What to do
The takeaway from this is that WordPress plugins represent a major security headache for site owners and need to be updated quickly, as soon as new software becomes available.
WordPress is such a popular platform that all WordPress site operators should assume that their sites are the subject of constant scans, probes and automated hacking attempts and it’s a trend that shows no sign of ebbing.
Campaigns like this work by exploiting known vulnerabilities in WordPress plugins and, as ever, prevention is better than cure. So, check regularly to ensure your plugins are up to date and make sure that your WordPress core software
As already noted, the giveaways for the latest attack are currently the user wpservices using the email [email protected]. The attackers can change this (and the list of plugins they’re targeting) at their leisure, of course.
Recovering a compromised site is beyond the scope of this article but if you find yourself needing to do it you’ll wish you had full, regular, off-site backups. So, if you don’t have that set up for your site already, do it now, before you need it!