KB4523205: Windows Server Security Update (November 2019)
Microsoft Windows Certificate Dialog contains a privilege escalation vulnerability, allowing attackers to run processes in an elevated context.
A local attacker, with a low-privilege account, can achieve full data confidentiality loss, arbitrary modification of data, complete denial of service or system unavailability. CISA has confirmed use of this vulnerability in known ransomware campaigns — treat as high priority for remediation. Federal agencies are required to remediate by 2023-04-28 under CISA BOD 22-01.
This is a Improper Privilege Management (CWE-269) vulnerability in Microsoft Windows. An elevation of privilege vulnerability exists in the Windows Certificate Dialog when it does not properly enforce user privileges, aka 'Windows Certificate Dialog Elevation of Privilege Vulnerability'. Exploitation requires local access, low attack complexity, a low-privilege authenticated account, and no user interaction required.
Probably yes if any of these apply:
CISA confirms this CVE has been used in known ransomware campaigns. Added to the KEV catalog on 2023-04-07; federal agencies required to remediate by 2023-04-28.
Manual download
For air-gapped servers or out-of-band deployment. Microsoft Update Catalog returns every OS-version variant of this update.
↗ Microsoft Update CatalogKB4523205Manual remediation steps
Apply the Microsoft Security Update
Microsoft has released an official security update that fixes this vulnerability.
Required KB Updates
Supersedes: KB4517389, KB4519338, KB4519976, KB4519985, KB4519998, KB4520002, KB4520003, KB4520004, KB4520005, KB4520007, KB4520008, KB4520011
Affected Products
Installation Methods
Windows Update (recommended)
Microsoft Update Catalog (manual download)
.msu installer with administrator privilegesWSUS / SCCM / Intune
Approve KB4523205 for the affected products in your update management console.
Microsoft Download Center Links
Verification
Confirm the update is installed:
Get-HotFix | Where-Object { $_.HotFixID -in @('KB4523205','KB4524570','KB4525232','KB4525233','KB4525234','KB4525235','KB4525236','KB4525237','KB4525239','KB4525241','KB4525243','KB4525246','KB4525250','KB4525253') }
References
Discovery Credit
Eduardo Braun Prado working with Trend Micro's Zero Day Initiative
No tested PowerShell script for this entry yet. We’re prioritising automation based on user demand.