18 May 2026
Reference: CVE-2026-8043
1. What is being reported?
The vulnerability allows someone who has logged into Ivanti Xtraction to control file names in a way that lets them read private files and place harmful HTML files on the web server. This could lead to sensitive information being exposed and users being targeted with malicious content.
2. What this means in plain English
If your organisation uses Ivanti Xtraction and has not updated to the latest version, attackers might be able to steal important information or trick your staff or customers through malicious web pages. This could harm your reputation and lead to further security problems.
3. Could this affect a small business?
Small organisations using Ivanti Xtraction software versions before 2026.2 could be affected, especially if the software is accessible to multiple users. If you do not use this software, or have already updated it, you are unlikely to be affected.
4. What to do now
- Check if your organisation uses Ivanti Xtraction software and note the version number.
- If using a version before 2026.2, arrange to update the software to the latest version as soon as possible.
- Limit access to Ivanti Xtraction to trusted users only until the update is applied.
- Ask your IT provider to review your system for any signs of unusual activity related to this vulnerability.
5. Ask your IT provider
Can you confirm if our Ivanti Xtraction software is up to date and protected against the CVE-2026-8043 vulnerability?
6. Bottom line
Keep your Ivanti Xtraction software updated to prevent attackers from accessing sensitive files or injecting harmful content.
Information based on CISA KEV, NVD and reputable security reporting.