If your business relies on remote monitoring and management tools, a recent advisory is a clear reminder: patch early, patch often. CISA reports that ransomware actors exploited an unpatched SimpleHelp RMM to compromise a utility billing software provider. It’s a concrete example of how a vulnerability in a tool you may rely on can become a doorway for attackers.
What happened
According to the official advisory AA25-163A, ransomware actors exploited the unpatched SimpleHelp Remote Monitoring and Management (RMM) software to gain access and compromise the provider’s environment. No need for sensational details—this underscores that unpatched software remains a common attack vector and ransomware operators actively look for exposed RMMs.
Why it matters
Why this matters to regular users, small businesses, creators, and IT-minded readers:
- Small businesses often rely on outsourced IT or simple RMM setups. An unpatched RMM can give attackers a foothold in your network.
- For creators and developers, supply chain and third-party risk are real. If your collaboration tools or billing platforms depend on a vulnerable component, your audience could be affected.
- For IT pros, this is a reminder to enforce patching discipline, monitor for suspicious RMM activity, and segment networks to limit lateral movement.
Practical steps you can take
- Check and update your RMM software to the latest version from the vendor. Enable automatic updates if possible.
- Review and apply all vendor security advisories related to your RMM and connected systems.
- Enable MFA on RMM consoles and enforce least-privilege access; consider restricting access by IP where feasible.
- Segment networks so that RMM access is limited to a dedicated management tier; monitor for unusual RMM activity with EDR or SIEM if available.
- Ensure regular backups are performed, test restoration drills, and keep offline or immutable backups where possible.
- Have an incident response plan and run tabletop exercises to practice containment and recovery.
Final thought
Keeping software patched and monitoring activity is not a one-off task; it’s an ongoing practice that reduces risk for you and your customers. If you’re unsure about your setup, start with a quick security review and talk to your IT provider about hardening your environment.