Multiple Industrial Control System Vulnerabilities Disclosed by CISA
CISA released a coordinated set of advisories detailing newly discovered vulnerabilities affecting a range of industrial control system (ICS) products from vendors including Advantech, Johnson Controls, Mitsubishi Electric, and SolisCloud. The vulnerabilities include a critical SQL injection flaw in Advantech iView (CVE-2025-13373), improper certificate expiration validation in Johnson Controls iSTAR (CVE-2025-61736), cleartext storage of sensitive information in Mitsubishi Electric GX Works2 (CVE-2025-3784), a forced browsing vulnerability in Johnson Controls OpenBlue Mobile Web Application (CVE-2025-26381), and an authorization bypass in SolisCloud Monitoring Platform (CVE-2025-13932). These flaws could allow attackers to access or modify sensitive data, disrupt communications, or gain unauthorized access to critical infrastructure systems. CISA's advisories provide technical details, affected product versions, and recommended mitigations, such as software updates and network segmentation, to reduce the risk of exploitation.
The vulnerabilities impact products deployed globally across sectors such as critical manufacturing, energy, commercial facilities, and government services. Some advisories note that fixes are available, while others indicate that patches are still under development or that vendors have not responded to coordination efforts. CISA urges organizations using these products to review the advisories and implement recommended mitigations to protect against potential attacks targeting these ICS environments.

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How this story unfolded
5 events from the most recent confirmed update back to the earliest known activity.
CISA releases nine ICS security advisories
On December 4, 2025, CISA published nine new Industrial Control Systems advisories covering vulnerabilities and security issues in products from Mitsubishi Electric, Johnson Controls, MAXHUB, Sunbird, SolisCloud, Advantech, and Consilium Safety. The advisories provided technical details and recommended mitigations for affected industrial and operational technology environments.
Mitsubishi Electric says fix for GX Works2 flaw is in development
Mitsubishi Electric stated that it is developing a fix for CVE-2025-3784 in GX Works2. Until a patch is available, the vendor recommended mitigations including network segmentation, access controls, antivirus protection, and encryption of project files.
Advantech releases iView 5.8.1 to fix CVE-2025-13373
Advantech released version 5.8.1 of iView to remediate the critical SQL injection vulnerability CVE-2025-13373. CISA advised affected organizations to upgrade and follow standard ICS defense-in-depth practices.
Advantech iView SQL injection vulnerability identified
Researcher m00nback identified CVE-2025-13373, a critical SQL injection flaw in Advantech iView 5.7.05.7057 and earlier that can be exploited remotely via SNMP v1 trap requests without authentication. The vulnerability could allow disclosure, modification, or deletion of data.
Mitsubishi Electric GX Works2 vulnerability reported to CISA
Researcher Jiho Shin of Sungkyunkwan University reported a cleartext credential storage flaw, tracked as CVE-2025-3784, affecting all versions of Mitsubishi Electric GX Works2. The issue could let a local attacker obtain or modify project information protected by user authentication.
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Sources
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Advantech iView
cisa.gov
Open sourceJohnson Controls iSTAR
cisa.gov
Open sourceMitsubishi Electric GX Works2
cisa.gov
Open sourceCISA Releases Nine Industrial Control Systems Advisories
cisa.gov
Open sourceJohnson Controls OpenBlue Mobile Web Application for OpenBlue Workplace
cisa.gov
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