May 4, 2020 By David Bisson < 1 min read

Security researchers discovered that students could abuse vulnerabilities in certain learning management system (LMS) plugins to access records and edit data.

Check Point Research conducted a security audit of three popular WordPress LMS plugins: LearnPress, LearnDash and LifterLMS. Those plugins were installed on 100,000 educational platforms at the time of analysis, including both traditional universities and hundreds of online academies.

The researchers uncovered several vulnerabilities that were worthy of attention. For instance, they observed one security flaw through which registered users could have elevated their privileges to those belonging to a teacher. They could have then used those rights to retrieve test answers, change the test answers of their fellow students or even change their own grades.

Through some of the other bugs, students and unauthenticated users could have even stolen sensitive information such as usernames, passwords and full names.

Vulnerabilities in Other LMS Plugins and Software

The three WordPress LMS plugins discussed above aren’t the only educational software programs that have suffered from security vulnerabilities. As reported by InfoWorld back in 2017, researchers observed that they could have exploited several vulnerabilities in Moodle to create secret administrative accounts and execute malicious PHP code. And in December 2019, Cisco Talos uncovered three SQL injection vulnerabilities in the Forma LMS.

Strengthen Your Organization’s Patching Capabilities

Security professionals can help their organizations remediate vulnerabilities such as the ones discussed above by breaking down the silos that separate departments. By improving interdepartmental cooperation, organizations can more easily remedy critical vulnerabilities on a timely basis. Organizations also need to maintain and continually manage an inventory of assets that is prioritized based on their value to the business.

More from

Change Healthcare attack expected to exceed $1 billion in costs

3 min read - The impact of the recent Change Healthcare cyberattack is unprecedented — and so are the costs. Rick Pollack, President and CEO of the American Hospital Association, stated, “The Change Healthcare cyberattack is the most significant and consequential incident of its kind against the U.S. healthcare system in history.”In a recent earnings call, UnitedHealth Group, the parent company of Change Healthcare, speculated on the overall data breach costs. When all is said and done, the total tally may reach $1 billion…

Remote access risks on the rise with CVE-2024-1708 and CVE-2024-1709

4 min read - On February 19, ConnectWise reported two vulnerabilities in its ScreenConnect product, CVE-2024-1708 and 1709. The first is an authentication bypass vulnerability, and the second is a path traversal vulnerability. Both made it possible for attackers to bypass authentication processes and execute remote code.While ConnectWise initially reported that the vulnerabilities had proof-of-concept but hadn’t been spotted in the wild, reports from customers quickly made it clear that hackers were actively exploring both flaws. As a result, the company created patches for…

Evolving red teaming for AI environments

2 min read - As AI becomes more ingrained in businesses and daily life, the importance of security grows more paramount. In fact, according to the IBM Institute for Business Value, 96% of executives say adopting generative AI (GenAI) makes a security breach likely in their organization in the next three years. Whether it’s a model performing unintended actions, generating misleading or harmful responses or revealing sensitive information, in the AI era security can no longer be an afterthought to innovation.AI red teaming is emerging…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today