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Threats / Microsoft / CVE-2023-38180
CVE-2023-38180 · EUVD no mirror located · GCVE no mirror located Verified 2026-06-22

Microsoft .NET Core and Visual Studio vulnerability

An unspecified denial-of-service vulnerability in Microsoft .NET Core and Visual Studio allows attackers to disrupt service availability.

Verdict

Today item — known-exploited.

This DoS vulnerability in widely-used development and runtime platforms poses availability risk to organizations running affected .NET Core and Visual Studio versions. Active exploitation in the wild increases urgency of patching.

CISA KEV Yes · 2023-08-093EPSS 0.15519 (verify live)4
01

Is it exploitable?

— the evidence, ranked above the score
Reported exploitation
3 independent public reports of in-the-wild exploitation are cataloged.Distinct reporting sources (vendor, incident response, government); open them for the underlying claims.
Exploited in the wild
Listed in the CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog (added 2023-08-09).
CISA KEV ↗Confirmed
Probability (EPSS)
EPSS 0.15519 — modeled likelihood of exploitation activity.EPSS is a daily-changing model output — open the source for today's value.
Severity / affected
Affected: Microsoft, .NET Core and Visual Studio. Confirm exact fixed builds in the vendor advisory.
NVD ↗Reported
02

Who’s exploiting it?

— attribution turns risk into urgency
Attribution not established

No confirmed (advisory-backed) threat-actor attribution is established for this record. Absence of a named actor is not absence of compromise — see Coverage & confidence.

03

Why it matters

— the attack path, told twice: adversary, then board
1

Front door — unauthenticated access narrative 1

Attacker
I craft or send malicious input designed to trigger resource exhaustion in the .NET Core runtime or Visual Studio process.
Business
Development teams experience build failures, IDE crashes, or application downtime, disrupting software delivery pipelines and developer productivity.
2

Keys to the kingdom — privilege/identity takeover narrative 2

Attacker
I exploit the vulnerability to crash running .NET applications or development environments, forcing service restarts.
Business
Production .NET applications become unavailable, resulting in service interruptions and potential revenue loss for dependent business operations.
04

What to do

— defensible action
  • Remediate per the vendor advisory — confirm the fixed build for your version and verify exposure.1
Say it to the boardA vulnerability with this evidence profile is a defensible budget line, not a backlog ticket — fund the change against the proof above.
05

Coverage & confidence

— what we know, and what we don’t

Established (cited)

  • KEV listing (CISA)
  • EPSS probability (FIRST)
  • 3 reported-exploitation source(s)
  • Catalogued by microsoft (CNA)
  • Coverage gaps — stated, not hidden

  • No EUVD / GCVE mirror in feed — single-authority dependency for the identifier.
  • EPSS & exposure are time-varying; verify live at the source.
  • Threat-actor attribution not established from feed data — absence of a name is not absence of compromise.
  • No finder/reporter credit recorded in the public CVE entry — the work behind this find is unattributed.
  • Disclosure & credit2
    Catalogued by microsoftCNA
    Credited with finding itNo finder named in the public CVE record — the work behind this find is unattributed.