The Clop ransomware gang has orchestrated a massive extortion campaign targeting Oracle E-Business Suite customers by exploiting a critical zero-day vulnerability tracked as CVE-2025-61882. The vulnerability, which carries a CVSS score of 9.8, affects Oracle EBS versions 12.2.3 through 12.2.14 and allows unauthenticated remote code execution without requiring credentials.
Beginning September 29, 2025, Clop operatives sent high-volume extortion emails to executives at numerous organizations, claiming to have stolen sensitive data from their Oracle EBS environments. However, investigations by Google Threat Intelligence Group and Mandiant revealed that active exploitation began much earlier—as early as August 9, 2025, with suspicious activity dating back to July 10, 2025. This means attackers exploited the vulnerability weeks before Oracle released a patch on October 4, 2025.
The vulnerability affects the Concurrent Processing component's BI Publisher integration within Oracle EBS, allowing attackers to execute arbitrary code and gain complete control over compromised servers. Researchers identified multiple distinct exploitation chains targeting various EBS components, including UiServlet and SyncServlet modules. The most probable attack vector involved the SyncServlet module, where attackers injected malicious XSL files into databases via the XDO Template Manager to trigger remote code execution.
The campaign involved sophisticated multi-stage malware frameworks, including GOLDVEIN.JAVA downloader and the SAGE malware family. These tools closely resemble malware families deployed during Clop's previous Cleo software compromise in late 2024, strengthening attribution to the notorious cybercrime group. Attackers successfully exfiltrated significant amounts of data from impacted organizations, affecting dozens of victims according to current assessments.
Clop, also known as TA505 or FIN11, has been active since 2019 and maintains a track record of exploiting zero-day vulnerabilities in enterprise platforms. The group previously targeted Accellion FTA, SolarWinds Serv-U FTP, GoAnywhere MFT, MOVEit Transfer, and Cleo file transfer systems. This latest campaign demonstrates Clop's continued focus on rapid zero-day exploitation of critical enterprise software for large-scale data extortion operations.
Oracle issued an emergency security alert on October 4, 2025, urging customers to apply the patch immediately. The FBI characterized the zero-day as "an emergency putting Oracle E-Business Suite environments at risk of full compromise". CISA added CVE-2025-61882 to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog and issued urgent alerts regarding active exploitation for ransomware attacks worldwide.