CyberIntel ⬡ News
★ Saved ◆ Cyber Reads
← Back ◇ Industry News & Leadership Jun 19, 2026

15,000 WordPress Websites Cleaned Up in SocGholish Botnet Takedown

Security Week Archived Jun 19, 2026 ✓ Full text saved

Law enforcement and private partners took down 106 SocGholish C&C servers and domains as part of Operation Endgame. The post 15,000 WordPress Websites Cleaned Up in SocGholish Botnet Takedown appeared first on SecurityWeek .

Full text archived locally
✦ AI Summary · Claude Sonnet


    Law enforcement agencies in four countries, working with Europol and private partners, have disrupted SocGholish infrastructure and cleaned up nearly 15,000 infected WordPress websites. Active since 2017 and also known as FakeUpdates, SocGholish is a malware framework injected into websites running popular content management systems, such as WordPress, Joomla, and Drupal, either via known vulnerabilities or stolen credentials. The framework acts as a JavaScript-based dropper, deploying various malware families as part of drive-by downloads, including ransomware, banking trojans, spyware, and more, and has been one of the most used loaders for years. SocGholish is operated by a Russian-speaking threat actor tracked as DEV-0206, Gold Prelude, Mustard Tempest, TA569, and UNC1543, which acts as an initial access broker and has been associated with the infamous Evil Corp gang (believed to be linked to Russian intelligence). TA569 has been observed indiscriminately compromising websites to inject the SocGholish loader, including prominent media and retail portals visited by millions of users daily. The malware profiles a victim’s browser, performs specific checks, and then overwrites the entire webpage with a fake browser update to entice the user into downloading a malicious payload, Proofpoint explains. Orange’s cyber defense unit observed SocGholish delivering loaders like Gholoader and MintsLoader, which eventually led to payloads such as the GhostWeaver PowerShell backdoor, LockBit and RansomHub ransomware, and AsyncRAT or NetSupport RAT backdoors. According to Infoblox, approximately 55% of cloud customers were exposed to SocGholish this year, which demonstrates the high risk the botnet poses to enterprises worldwide. The ShadowServer Foundation puts that into better perspective: in May, there were more than 1.44 million compromised WordPress websites available for use by SocGholish. Authorities in the Netherlands, Canada, the US, and Germany, with support from Europol, took down 106 command-and-control (C&C) servers and domains associated with SocGholish, and removed backdoors and malware from 14.971 infected WordPress websites. The Dutch police say notifications were also sent to WordPress site owners whose compromised credentials were identified, urging them to change their logins, enable MFA, delete suspect accounts, and keep their sites updated. Related: Dutch Police Dismantle Massive 17-Million-Device Botnet Related: GlassWorm Botnet Disrupted Related: Tycoon 2FA Fully Operational Despite Law Enforcement Takedown Related: SystemBC Infects 10,000 Devices After Defying Law Enforcement Takedown WRITTEN BY Ionut Arghire Ionut Arghire is an international correspondent for SecurityWeek. More from Ionut Arghire Critical Command Execution Vulnerability Patched in Cisco ISE F5 Patches Critical, High-Severity NGINX Vulnerabilities Microsoft Teams Relay Servers Abused in DragonForce Ransomware Attack Microsoft Working on Patch for ‘RoguePlanet’ Zero-Day Chrome and Firefox Updated to Patch Critical, High-Severity Vulnerabilities Joomla, LiteSpeed Vulnerabilities Exploited in Attacks Magnitude Emerges From Stealth Mode With $10 Million in Funding Cybercrime Group Claims Novo Nordisk Hack Latest News Cisco to Acquire WideField Security to Boost Splunk’s Agentic SOC Splunk Enterprise Vulnerability Exploited in Attacks Days After Disclosure Majority of Internet-Accessible REDCap Servers Outdated Accenture to Acquire Majority Stake in Dragos, All of runZero, NetRise in $4.1 Billion OT Cybersecurity Push No Exploits Required Dream Raises $260 Million at $3 Billion Valuation Atlassian, Splunk Patch Critical Vulnerabilities Rokarolla Banking Trojan Targets 200 Applications Trending Webinar: How Modern Breaches Bypass MFA And Evade Detection June 17, 2026 Today’s attackers are no longer breaking in — they’re logging in. Join this live webinar as we break down the modern identity attack chain and examine how recent breaches exploited weaknesses in authentication, identity verification, and access management processes. Register Webinar: Modern Exposure Validation In The AI Era June 24, 2026 AI has accelerated both sides of the fight. Adversaries are weaponizing vulnerabilities faster, while defenders are racing to ship detections and configurations. Join this live webinar as we explore how to prove your controls actually hold against new threats, map your security maturity, and unite breach simulation with automated pentesting into a single, coordinated program. Register People on the Move SolarWinds has appointed Justin Henkel as Chief Information Security Officer. J. Paul Haynes has joined Cinchy as Chief Executive Officer. Hatem Naguib has become Chief Executive Officer at Sysdig. More People On The Move Expert Insights No Exploits Required Four decades of incident response experience suggest that exploits are often the symptom, not the root cause, of today’s cybersecurity failures. (Tod Beardsley) After AI Reaches Production: 12 Ways Security Teams Can Take Control Security teams need more than visibility into AI applications, they need a repeatable framework for monitoring, investigating, and defending them in production. (Joshua Goldfarb) Everybody Is Vibe Coding But Nobody Told The Security Team AI-driven development is not something organizations can or should block. But it must be governed. (Danelle Au) The Zero-Knowledge Threat Actor And The End Of Responsible Disclosure AI can help attackers generate malware, create malicious payloads, bypass simple security checks, and convert vague malicious intent into functional code. (Etay Maor) Raising The Cybersecurity Stakes: Ante Up For The Agentic Era CISOs are now facing machine-speed attacks and asking, “How do I agent?” The industry must provide remediation at scale. (Nadir Izrael) Flipboard Reddit Whatsapp Email
    💬 Team Notes
    Article Info
    Source
    Security Week
    Category
    ◇ Industry News & Leadership
    Published
    Jun 19, 2026
    Archived
    Jun 19, 2026
    Full Text
    ✓ Saved locally
    Open Original ↗