BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Is this how the revolution begins?
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Tue, 26 May 2026 10:03:04 -0500
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 * Originally in: SF_Reality

'Security of your network is essential to security of your robot': Industrial 
robots targeted by malware, which could open them up to hacking  is this how 
the revolution begins?

Date:
Mon, 25 May 2026 22:15:00 +0000

A critical Universal Robots vulnerability allows attackers to remotely 
execute commands and potentially compromise industrial robots and factory 
networks.

The flaw, tracked as CVE-2026-8153, carries a CVSS score of 9.8 and affects 
all software versions prior to PolyScope 5.25.1. An unauthenticated attacker 
who can reach the Dashboard Server network port can craft commands that 
execute directly on the robot's underlying operating system.

The Dashboard Server accepts user-controlled input and passes it to the 
operating system without properly neutralizing special command elements. 
This oversight allows an attacker to inject arbitrary commands that the robot 
will execute with full system privileges. 

The flaw was discovered and reported by Vera Mens of Claroty Team82, who 
coordinated the disclosure through CISA and CERT/CC's VINCE platform.

Universal Robots has released a patch in PolyScope 5.25.1, which is available 
on the company's support site for all affected customers - but the patch does 
nothing until someone actually installs it, and every day that passes without 
updating is another day attackers have to exploit known vulnerabilities. 

Therefore, the company strongly recommends that every user update to version 
5.25.1 or newer as soon as possible. Network security is the real protection 
against this exploitation Remote exploitation of this vulnerability requires 
the robot's Dashboard Server to be enabled in the user interface, and its 
network port must be reachable by the attacker.

Universal Robots stated that its products are not designed to be accessible 
directly from the internet, and direct inbound internet access is typically 
prevented by corporate firewalls . 

However, robots that are accessible from a local area network may be 
vulnerable to attacks originating from within that network. 

"Security of your network is essential to security of your robot," the 
company warned in its advisory to customers and integrators. 

No known public exploitation specifically targeting this vulnerability has 
been reported to CISA at the time of this disclosure. 

This vulnerability is serious, and the conditions for exploitation are not 
difficult to imagine in real industrial environments. 

A compromised workstation on the same factory floor network could easily 
reach a robot's Dashboard Server port if proper network segmentation is 
missing. 

Their behaviour afterwards could be unpredictable, because it is controlled 
by someone other than its owners. 

Therefore, this will likely not lead to some sort of autonomous robotic 
revolution, but only represents the preponderance of hackers trying to gain 
control of systems. 

The rise of collaborative robots working alongside humans makes this threat 
particularly concerning because a compromised robot could cause physical harm 
to nearby personnel.

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/security/security-of-your-network-is-essential-t
o-security-of-your-robot-industrial-robots-targeted-by-malware-which-could-ope
n-them-up-to-hacking-is-this-how-the-revolution-begins

$$
--- MultiMail/DOS
 * Origin: Capitol City Hub (1:2320/105)

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