Exploited CVEs / D-Link / CVE-2024-3273

CVE-2024-3273

Actively exploited D-Link Multiple NAS Devices vulnerability, Critical severity, CVSS 9.8. Added to the CISA KEV catalog 2024-04-11.

D-Link Multiple NAS Devices Command Injection Vulnerability. Exploitation in the wild is confirmed by CISA, not predicted. Federal agencies were required to remediate by 2024-05-02 (that deadline has passed); treat that date as the outer bound for your own environment. The fix is in the vendor advisory: D-Link Support Announcements, linked below.

CriticalCISA KEV

Risk summary

CVSS base
9.8
EPSS exploit probability
100%
Severity
Critical
Added to KEV
2024-04-11
CISA due date
2024-05-02 (past due)

Ask your own AI about CVE-2024-3273

Copy this prompt into Claude, ChatGPT, or Copilot. The facts are included, sourced from this page.

CISA required action

Federal (BOD 22-01) remediation due date: 2024-05-02 (past due).

This vulnerability affects legacy D-Link products. All associated hardware revisions have reached their end-of-life (EOL) or end-of-service (EOS) life cycle and should be retired and replaced per vendor instructions.

Official fix for CVE-2024-3273

The authoritative fix and affected-version list are published by the vendor. Find the Multiple NAS Devices advisory on D-Link Support Announcements.

Common questions about CVE-2024-3273

Is CVE-2024-3273 actively exploited?

Yes. CVE-2024-3273 was added to the CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog on 2024-04-11, which means exploitation in the wild has been confirmed, not predicted. Its EPSS 30-day exploitation probability is 100%.

What is the CISA deadline and required action for CVE-2024-3273?

CISA set the federal (BOD 22-01) remediation due date at 2024-05-02, which has passed; treat any unremediated system as overdue. The verbatim required action: This vulnerability affects legacy D-Link products. All associated hardware revisions have reached their end-of-life (EOL) or end-of-service (EOS) life cycle and should be retired and replaced per vendor instructions.

What fixes CVE-2024-3273?

The authoritative fix is in the vendor advisory: see D-Link Support Announcements for the patched Multiple NAS Devices versions and any workarounds. KEV listing makes this a fix-first item: patch it ahead of higher-CVSS issues nobody is exploiting.

Can I ask my own AI about CVE-2024-3273?

Yes. This page includes a free, ready-to-paste AI prompt containing CVE-2024-3273's key facts: severity, CVSS, EPSS, the KEV date, the CISA due date, and the required action. Copy it into Claude, ChatGPT, or Copilot; the data is refreshed daily.

More exploited D-Link CVEs

The newest D-Link entries on the CISA KEV catalog:

All D-Link exploited CVEs on one page: D-Link vulnerabilities actively exploited.

Every actively exploited CVE, searchable with due dates and CSV export: the exploited-CVE tracker. The newest additions: exploited this week.

Sponsored by Senserva

Siemserva by Senserva reports patch status for your own devices: which ones are exposed to CVE-2024-3273, for example, ranked by what attackers actually exploit.

  • Patch status in one scan: which devices are affected, which are not
  • Missing updates ranked by CISA KEV and EPSS, so you fix the right things first
  • Data from Intune, Microsoft Defender, Windows Autopatch, and Azure Update Manager, with more sources on the way
  • Third-party app patching too: updates published to Intune by PatchMyPC, Scappman, Robopack, or any vendor, read vendor-neutrally
  • Optional AI Enhanced Reporting: plain-language summaries and recommended next steps written into your reports
  • Then go further: 650+ security checks, compliance evidence, and Senserva Trustworthy AI driven configuration remediation
Patch Status Report
CVE-2024-3273 exposure across 110 devices, ranked by exploitation
23
EXPOSED TO CVE-2024-3273
87
UP TO DATE
41
OTHER UPDATES DUE
UPDATESEVERITYKEVMISSING
CVE-2024-3273CriticalEXPLOITED23
KB5094142High-11
KB5094139High-6
Estimated report, sample data for illustration
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Lexicon: the terms on this page
CVE
Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures. A unique ID for one publicly known vulnerability, such as CVE-2025-1234.
KB
Microsoft Knowledge Base article. The identifier for a specific Microsoft update.
KEV
CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities. CVEs confirmed exploited in the wild. Fix these first.
CVSS
Common Vulnerability Scoring System. A standardized Severity score from 0 to 10.
EPSS
Exploit Prediction Scoring System. The probability a CVE will be exploited in the next 30 days.
MSRC
Microsoft Security Response Center. Microsoft's Patch Tuesday advisories and KB-to-CVE mapping.
NVD
National Vulnerability Database (NIST). Authoritative CVE metadata and CVSS scores.
Ransomware
The vulnerability is linked to known ransomware activity.
Reference: the Microsoft patching guide, how Intune, Windows Autopatch, Defender, and Azure Update Manager fit together.
Data notice: this page, the feeds, and the API are provided as is, for informational purposes only, without warranty of any kind. Senserva, LLC does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of third-party data (MSRC, NVD, CISA KEV, EPSS) and accepts no liability for actions taken based on it; verify against the authoritative vendor advisory before acting. Built daily with Senserva Trustworthy AI. All use of this data is subject to the Senserva EULA.