Microsoft has addressed a misconfiguration issue impacting the Azure Active Directory (AAD) identity and access management service that exposed multiple Microsoft applications, including the Bing management portal, to unauthorized access.
The vulnerability was discovered by Wiz Research which determined that about 25% of multi-tenant applications turned out to be vulnerable.
“We found several high-impact, vulnerable Microsoft applications. One of these apps is a content management system (CMS) that powers Bing.com and allowed us to not only modify search results, but also launch high-impact XSS attacks on Bing users.” reads the post published by security firm Wiz. “Those attacks could compromise users’ personal data, including Outlook emails and SharePoint documents.”
The issues were reported to Microsoft in January and February 2022, following which the tech giant applied fixes and awarded Wiz a $40,000 bug bounty. Redmond said it found no evidence that the misconfigurations were exploited in the wild.
The vulnerability is related to a misconfiguration in ‘Shared Responsibility confusion.’ The shared responsibility model allows application owners to add an authentication function by simply clicking a button.
The experts pointed out that the flaw has a severe impact, especially on multi-tenant applications without proper validation because any Azure user will be able to log in to the application.
This means that several Microsoft Microsoft applications permit external parties to obtain read and write to the impacted applications.
The researchers detailed a case study on the “Bing Trivia” application, which they have called “#BingBang,” which demonstrates how the misconfiguration impacts Microsoft.
Wiz Research explained that an attacker can exploit the flaw to target the Bing Trivia app to alter search results in Bing and even manipulate content on the homepage as part of the BingBang attack.
The experts also demonstrated how to weaponize the issue to trigger a cross-site scripting (XSS) attack on Bing.com and extract sensitive data, Outlook emails, calendars, OneDrive files, and more.
“We found several high-impact, vulnerable Microsoft applications. One of these apps is a content management system (CMS) that powers Bing.com and allowed us to not only modify search results, but also launch high-impact XSS attacks on Bing users. Those attacks could compromise users’ personal data, including Outlook emails and SharePoint documents.” continues the analysis. “A malicious actor with the same access could’ve hijacked the most popular search results with the same payload and leak sensitive data from millions of users. According to SimilarWeb, Bing is the 27th most visited website in the world, with over a billion pageviews per month – in other words, millions of users could’ve been exposed to malicious search results and Office 365 data theft.”
The experts discovered that other apps were impacted by the misconfiguration issue, including Mag News, Central Notification Service (CNS), Contact Center, PoliCheck, Power Automate Blog, and COSMOS.
Below is the disclosure timeline:
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