CYBERDUDEBIVASH SENTINEL APEX™ // PREMIUM THREAT INTELLIGENCE ADVISORY
Metasploit Wrap-Up 03/27/2026
Advanced Threat Intelligence Advisory by CyberDudeBivash Sentinel APEX™ — AI-Powered Global Threat Intelligence Infrastructure
1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY (CISO / BOARD READY)
Overview
The CyberDudeBivash Global Operations Center (GOC) has identified and analyzed a significant cybersecurity event classified as a Vulnerability Disclosure / Exploitation with a dynamic risk score of 10.0/10 (CRITICAL). This advisory covers the threat designated as "Metasploit Wrap-Up 03/27/2026", attributed to tracking cluster UNC-UNKNOWN.
This week's release brings an improvement to the SMB NTLM relay server. In the past, it's support has been expanded with modules for relaying to HTTP (ESC8), MSSQL and LDAP while still receiving connections over the humble SMB service. Prior to this release, clients required a key behavior in how they handled SMB's STATUS_NETWORK_SESSION_EXPIRED error code, in order to relay a single... Pull request: #20478 contributed by futileskills Description: Adds a new auxiliary module that exploits CVE-2026-23767, an unauthenticated ESC/POS command vulnerability in networked Epson-compatible printers. The vulnerability allows an attacker to send crafted commands over the network to inject custom ESC/POS print commands, which are used in various receipt printers.
The Sentinel APEX AI Engine has processed all available intelligence, extracting 7 indicators of compromise across 3 categories. IOC confidence is assessed at 45.5% based on indicator diversity, source reliability, and actor attribution strength. Security teams in the All Industries, Critical Infrastructure, Government sectors should treat this advisory as an actionable intelligence requirement.
This advisory references 3 CVE(s) (CVE-2023-2868, CVE-2025-12548, CVE-2026-23767), indicating that vulnerability exploitation may be a component of the observed activity. Organizations should cross-reference these CVE identifiers against their vulnerability management programs and prioritize patching accordingly.
Business Risk Implications: Organizations exposed to this threat face potential impacts across multiple dimensions including operational disruption, financial losses from incident response and remediation costs, reputational damage from public disclosure, and regulatory penalties under applicable data protection frameworks. Security leaders should evaluate this advisory against their organization's risk appetite and threat exposure profile, engaging executive stakeholders as appropriate based on the assessed severity level. The recommended response actions are detailed in Sections 9, 10, and 11 of this report.
Key Risk Rating
| Category | Assessment |
|---|---|
| Overall Risk Score | 10.0 / 10 |
| Confidence Level | Medium (45.5%) |
| Exploitability | Active / High Probability |
| Industry Impact | CRITICAL |
Strategic Impact Assessment
This threat poses immediate risk to business continuity, data integrity, and organizational reputation. Financial exposure from potential data breach, regulatory penalties, and operational disruption could be substantial. Organizations in the All Industries, Critical Infrastructure, Government sectors face heightened exposure due to the nature of this threat. Regulatory implications under frameworks including GDPR, HIPAA, PCI-DSS, and sector-specific mandates should be evaluated by compliance teams.
2. THREAT LANDSCAPE CONTEXT
Campaign Background
This campaign operates within the broader context of vulnerability disclosure / exploitation activity that has been observed across the global threat landscape. Intelligence analysis indicates that threat actors continue to evolve their tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) to exploit emerging vulnerabilities, misconfigured infrastructure, and human factors.
Pull request: #20478 contributed by futileskills Description: Adds a new auxiliary module that exploits CVE-2026-23767, an unauthenticated ESC/POS command vulnerability in networked Epson-compatible printers. The vulnerability allows an attacker to send crafted commands over the network to inject custom ESC/POS print commands, which are used in various receipt printers. Eclipse Che machine-exec Unauthenticated RCE Authors: Greg Durys [email protected] and Richard Leach
The CyberDudeBivash GOC tracks this activity under its institutional tracking framework, correlating indicators across multiple intelligence sources to establish campaign scope. All attribution and technical claims in this section are derived from the source article and verified intelligence feeds - speculative or unverified claims are clearly labeled as Analyst Assessment rather than confirmed intelligence.
Analyst Assessment: Based on the nature of this advisory and the threat category classification, organizations operating in the All Industries, Critical Infrastructure, Government sectors should evaluate their exposure to this threat type and validate that relevant controls are active. Consult Section 9 (24-Hour IR Plan) for immediate response guidance.
Threat Actor Profile
| Attribute | Intelligence |
|---|---|
| Tracking ID | UNC-UNKNOWN |
| Aliases | Unattributed Threat Actor |
| Origin | Not Yet Attributed |
| Motivation | Under Analysis |
| Tooling | Varies - see technical analysis |
| Confidence | Insufficient data for attribution |
Attribution Reconciliation: The CyberDudeBivash GOC employs an Attribution has not been established with sufficient confidence for definitive actor assignment. The CyberDudeBivash GOC tracks this activity as an unattributed cluster pending further technical analysis. Intelligence consumers should treat third-party attribution claims with appropriate skepticism.
3. TECHNICAL ANALYSIS (DEEP-DIVE)
3.1 Infection Chain Reconstruction
This advisory covers a software vulnerability (CVE-2023-2868). Unlike malware campaigns which involve multi-stage infection chains, vulnerability disclosures describe a specific technical weakness in a software component.
Exploitation Context: The CVSS vector string associated with this vulnerability defines the attack surface - including network accessibility, required privileges, and user interaction requirements - which determines the conditions under which exploitation could occur. Consult Section 2 (Vulnerability Overview) and Section 3 (Verified Technical Details) for the CVSS-grounded exploitation profile.
No infection chain is applicable to this advisory. An infection chain describes malware delivery, persistence, and lateral movement - none of which are part of this vulnerability's verified scope. Security teams should focus on patch deployment, version verification, and the detection guidance in Section 7 of this report.
3.2 Malware / Payload Analysis
This advisory covers a software vulnerability (CVE-2023-2868) and does not involve malware, payload delivery, or malicious code execution as part of the vulnerability's primary impact. The technical analysis is scoped to the vulnerability mechanism as described in the NVD entry.
Exploitation Mechanism: Exploitation of vulnerability-class weaknesses typically targets the specific flaw in the affected software component. Organizations should consult the CVSS vector string and CWE classification in the NVD entry for authoritative information on attack vectors, complexity, and required privileges.
No malware artifact analysis is applicable to this advisory. File hashes, payload signatures, and malware behavioral indicators are not relevant to this vulnerability disclosure. Detection strategies should focus on patch verification and network/application-layer monitoring aligned to the specific vulnerability class.
3.3 Infrastructure Mapping
Infrastructure analysis has identified 3 domain(s) associated with this advisory. Network defenders should block these indicators at firewall and DNS proxy level and investigate any historical connections in network logs. Domain registration patterns and SSL certificate pivoting may reveal additional connected infrastructure. All indicators are listed in Section 4 (IOC Table).
4. INDICATORS OF COMPROMISE (IOC SECTION)
Structured IOC Table
| Type | Indicator | Confidence | First Seen |
|---|---|---|---|
| Domain | docs.metasploit.com | High | 2026-03-28 |
| Domain | gregdurys.security | High | 2026-03-28 |
| Domain | proton.me | High | 2026-03-28 |
| Email Address | gregdurys.security@proton.me | Medium | 2026-03-28 |
| CVE Identifier | CVE-2023-2868 | High | 2026-03-28 |
| CVE Identifier | CVE-2025-12548 | High | 2026-03-28 |
| CVE Identifier | CVE-2026-23767 | High | 2026-03-28 |
Detection Recommendations
- Network Layer: Block identified IP addresses and domains at firewall and DNS proxy level. Implement DNS sinkholing for known malicious domains to prevent C2 callbacks.
- Endpoint Layer: Deploy virtual patching (WAF rules, IPS signatures) for the affected vulnerability. Monitor for exploitation indicators including web shell deployment, reverse shell activity, and post-exploitation tooling (Cobalt Strike, Sliver, Metasploit).
- Email Security: Update email gateway rules to detect associated phishing patterns. Implement DMARC/SPF/DKIM enforcement for impersonated domains.
- SIEM Correlation: Integrate the provided Sigma rules into SIEM platforms for real-time alerting. Correlate network IOCs with endpoint telemetry for campaign detection.
5. MITRE ATT&CK(R) MAPPING
The following MITRE ATT&CK(R) techniques have been identified through automated analysis of the threat intelligence associated with this campaign. Each technique represents a documented adversary behavior that defenders can use to build detection and response capabilities.
| Tactic | Technique | ID | Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Execution | Exploitation for Client Execution | T1203 | Client-side exploitation of applications |
| Execution | Command and Scripting Interpreter | T1059 | Abuse of command interpreters for execution |
6. DETECTION ENGINEERING (SOC READY)
6.1 Sigma Rules
The following Sigma rule provides SIEM-agnostic detection capability for this campaign. Deploy to Microsoft Sentinel, Splunk, Elastic, or any Sigma-compatible platform.
6.2 YARA Rules
Deploy this YARA rule for memory and disk forensics scanning across endpoints. Compatible with YARA-enabled EDR solutions and standalone YARA scanning.
6.3 SIEM Queries
Microsoft Sentinel (KQL):
Splunk SPL:
6.4 Network Detection
Monitor network traffic for connections to identified infrastructure. Implement the following Suricata/Snort compatible rule for network-level detection:
7. VULNERABILITY & EXPLOIT ANALYSIS
This advisory references the following CVE identifiers: CVE-2023-2868, CVE-2025-12548, CVE-2026-23767. These vulnerabilities may be actively exploited or referenced in the context of this threat activity. Organizations should immediately verify their exposure by cross-referencing these CVE IDs against their vulnerability management platforms (Qualys, Tenable, Rapid7) and CISA's Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog.
Patching should be prioritized based on asset criticality, exploit availability, and EPSS probability scores. For vulnerabilities where patches are not immediately available, implement compensating controls including network segmentation, WAF rules, and enhanced monitoring of affected systems.
| CVE ID | Affected Product | Vuln Type | CVSS | Priority | Risk Bar |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CVE-2023-2868 | See advisory | Under Analysis | 10.0 | HIGH | |
| CVE-2025-12548 | See advisory | Under Analysis | 10.0 | HIGH | |
| CVE-2026-23767 | See advisory | Under Analysis | 10.0 | HIGH |
8. RISK SCORING METHODOLOGY
The CyberDudeBivash Sentinel APEX Risk Engine calculates threat risk scores using a weighted multi-factor analysis model. This transparent methodology ensures that all risk assessments are reproducible, defensible, and aligned with enterprise risk management frameworks. The scoring formula considers the following dimensions:
| Factor | Weight | This Advisory |
|---|---|---|
| IOC Diversity (categories found) | 0.5 per category | 3 categories |
| File Hash Indicators (SHA256/MD5) | +1.5 | Not detected |
| Network Indicators (IP/Domain) | +1.0/+0.8 | 0 IPs, 3 Domains |
| MITRE ATT&CK Techniques | 0.3 per technique | 2 techniques mapped |
| Actor Attribution | +1.0 if known | UNC-UNKNOWN |
| CVSS/EPSS Integration | +2.0/+1.5 | Applied |
| FINAL SCORE | 10.0/10 |
This scoring methodology provides full transparency into how risk assessments are calculated, enabling security teams to validate findings and adjust organizational response priorities based on their specific risk appetite and threat exposure profile.
9. 24-HOUR INCIDENT RESPONSE PLAN
Organizations that identify exposure to this threat should execute the following immediate containment actions within the first 24 hours of detection:
- Network Segmentation: Isolate affected network segments to prevent lateral movement. Implement emergency firewall rules blocking all identified IOCs at perimeter and internal boundaries.
- IOC Blocking: Deploy all indicators from Section 4 to firewalls, web proxies, DNS filters, and endpoint protection platforms immediately. Prioritize IP and domain blocking.
- Credential Resets: Force password resets for any accounts that may have been exposed. Revoke active sessions and API tokens for compromised or potentially compromised accounts.
- Endpoint Scanning: Execute full disk and memory scans using updated YARA rules (Section 6.2) across all endpoints in the affected environment. Prioritize servers and privileged workstations.
- Forensic Capture: Preserve evidence by capturing memory dumps, disk images, and network packet captures from affected systems before any remediation actions that could alter evidence.
- Threat Hunting: Conduct proactive hunting using the SIEM queries from Section 6.3 to identify any historical compromise that predates detection.
10. 7-DAY REMEDIATION STRATEGY
Following initial containment, execute this structured remediation plan over the subsequent 7 days to ensure comprehensive threat elimination and hardening:
- Day 1-2 - MFA Enforcement: Deploy FIDO2-compliant multi-factor authentication across all external-facing and privileged accounts. Disable legacy authentication protocols (NTLM, Basic Auth).
- Day 2-3 - Patch Deployment: Accelerate patching for all vulnerabilities referenced in this advisory. Prioritize internet-facing systems and those with known exploit availability.
- Day 3-5 - Access Policy Hardening: Review and tighten conditional access policies. Implement Just-In-Time (JIT) access for administrative functions. Audit service accounts.
- Day 5-6 - Threat Hunting Sweep: Conduct comprehensive threat hunting across the enterprise using behavioral indicators from the MITRE ATT&CK mappings in Section 5.
- Day 6-7 - Log Retention Review: Ensure logging coverage meets forensic investigation requirements (minimum 90-day retention). Verify SIEM ingestion of all critical data sources.
11. STRATEGIC RECOMMENDATIONS
Beyond immediate incident response, organizations should evaluate the following strategic security improvements to reduce exposure to similar future threats:
- Zero Trust Architecture: Transition from perimeter-based security to a Zero Trust model that verifies every access request regardless of source location. Implement micro-segmentation.
- Behavioral Detection: Supplement signature-based detection with behavioral analytics capable of identifying novel attack techniques and living-off-the-land attacks.
- Threat Intelligence Integration: Subscribe to curated threat intelligence feeds and integrate automated IOC ingestion into SIEM/SOAR platforms for real-time protection.
- Security Awareness: Conduct targeted phishing simulation exercises for employees. Implement continuous security awareness training with measurable effectiveness metrics.
- SOC Automation: Deploy SOAR playbooks for automated triage and response to common threat scenarios. Reduce mean time to detect (MTTD) and respond (MTTR).
- Supply Chain Security: Implement vendor risk assessment frameworks and continuous monitoring of third-party software dependencies for emerging vulnerabilities.
12. INDUSTRY-SPECIFIC GUIDANCE
Different industries face unique risk profiles from this threat. The following targeted guidance addresses sector-specific considerations:
Financial Services
Ensure PCI-DSS compliance requirements are met for all systems in scope. Implement transaction monitoring for anomalous patterns. Review and strengthen API security for digital banking platforms. Coordinate with FS-ISAC for sector-specific intelligence sharing.
Healthcare
Verify HIPAA-compliant security controls around electronic health records (EHR) systems. Isolate medical device networks from general IT infrastructure. Ensure backup systems are operational and tested for ransomware scenarios.
Government
Align response with CISA directives and BOD requirements. Review FedRAMP authorized service configurations. Coordinate with sector-specific ISACs. Implement enhanced monitoring on .gov and .mil domains.
Technology / SaaS
Review CI/CD pipeline security. Audit third-party dependencies for vulnerability exposure. Implement enhanced monitoring on customer-facing APIs. Review incident communication plans for customer notification.
Manufacturing / Critical Infrastructure
Isolate OT/ICS networks from IT infrastructure. Review remote access policies for industrial control systems. Implement enhanced monitoring at IT/OT boundaries.
Education
Review student and faculty data protection controls. Monitor for credential-based attacks against identity providers. Ensure research data repositories are adequately segmented.
13. GLOBAL THREAT TRENDS CONNECTION
Vulnerability exploitation timelines have compressed dramatically - median time from CVE disclosure to weaponized exploit has fallen to under 48 hours for critical vulnerabilities. Network-edge devices (VPN appliances, firewalls, load balancers) and internet-facing applications remain the most exploited entry points. The CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog has become the authoritative signal for prioritizing patch deployment, with KEV-listed vulnerabilities receiving active exploitation within days of listing.
This advisory connects to the broader pattern of Vulnerability Disclosure / Exploitation activity tracked by the CyberDudeBivash GOC. Organizations that invest in behavioral detection capabilities, continuous threat intelligence integration, and security automation are best positioned to defend against the evolving threat landscape. Proactive, intelligence-driven security operations represent the most impactful strategic investment available to security leaders in the current environment.
Intelligence Confidence Note: Trend assessments in this section are based on CyberDudeBivash GOC analysis of published threat reports, CISA advisories, and multi-source intelligence feeds. Individual threat actor TTPs may vary from general trends described.
14. CYBERDUDEBIVASH AUTHORITY SECTION
This intelligence advisory is produced by the CyberDudeBivash Global Operations Center (GOC), a dedicated research division focused on AI-driven threat intelligence, enterprise detection engineering, and advanced cyber defense automation. Our platform processes intelligence from multiple high-authority sources to deliver actionable, timely, and comprehensive threat assessments for security professionals worldwide.
Enterprise Services:
- Custom Threat Monitoring & Intelligence Briefings
- Managed Detection & Response (MDR) Support
- Private Intelligence Briefings for Executive Teams
- Red Team & Blue Team Assessment Services
- SOC Automation & Detection Engineering Consulting
Contact: bivash@cyberdudebivash.com | Phone: +91 8179881447 | Web: https://www.cyberdudebivash.com
15. INTELLIGENCE KEYWORDS & TAXONOMY
Threat Intelligence Platform * SOC Detection Engineering * MITRE ATT&CK Mapping * IOC Analysis * CVE Deep Dive * AI Cybersecurity * Malware Analysis Report * Enterprise Threat Advisory * Cyber Threat Intelligence * Incident Response * Digital Forensics * STIX 2.1 * Sigma Rules * YARA Rules * CyberDudeBivash * Sentinel APEX * Metasploit
16. APPENDIX
Source Reference: https://www.rapid7.com/blog/post/pt-metasploit-wrap-up-03-27-2026
STIX 2.1 Bundle: Available via the CyberDudeBivash Threat Intel Platform JSON feed.
IOC Format: Structured JSON export available for SIEM/SOAR integration.
Report Version: v30.0 | Generated by Sentinel APEX AI Engine
CyberDudeBivash(R) - AI-Powered Global Threat Intelligence
This advisory is produced by the CyberDudeBivash Pvt. Ltd. Global Operations Center. Intelligence correlation, risk scoring, and detection engineering are powered by the Sentinel APEX AI Engine.
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