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An “authorized attacker” could exploit this weakness to gain elevated privileges, potentially reaching SYSTEM-level access.
Microsoft has disclosed a dangerous security vulnerability that is already keeping IT teams on high alert.
The flaw, tracked as CVE-2025-60703, stems from a fundamental coding error where the system fails to properly validate memory pointers before using them.
CVE-2025-60703 impacts multiple Windows releases, including Windows 10, 11, and various Server editions with RDS components enabled. Office desktops, critical servers, the backbone of many businesses, all at risk of privilege escalation right now.
An “authorized attacker” could exploit this weakness to gain elevated privileges, potentially reaching SYSTEM-level access. The attacker could exploit this weakness to gain elevated privileges, potentially reaching SYSTEM-level access, essentially complete control. Imagine a standard user jumping the fence and running arbitrary code with admin rights.
Under the hood, the flaw is straightforward and severe. CVE-2025-60703 falls under CWE-822: Untrusted Pointer Dereference, where the software fails to validate a pointer before dereferencing it. The system trusts memory addresses without checking them, creating a clean path for attackers to steer execution.
The timing makes it worse. This disclosure comes amid a surge in Windows-targeted threats, including recent zero-day vulnerabilities in other Microsoft products. Attackers are already dialed in on Windows infrastructure, so rapid patching is not optional, it is urgent.
Remote Desktop Services have become a favorite hunting ground. Three weeks ago, CVE-2025-59230, another Remote Access Connection Manager vulnerability, was added to CISA’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog. Two months back, researchers disclosed CVE-2025-53798 affecting Windows Routing and Remote Access Service with information disclosure capabilities.
Earlier this year, CVE-2025-50171 received a critical CVSS score of 9.1, and CVE-2025-21297 in Remote Desktop Gateway was actively exploited in the wild.
Microsoft has started shipping fixes. Updates are being distributed via Windows Update, with organizations relying on RDS for virtual desktop infrastructure urged to prioritize deployment. The affected range is huge, from legacy Windows Server 2008 versions still under Extended Security Updates through current Windows 11 versions.
While patches land, teams are tightening defenses. They are recommending enforcing least-privilege principles, monitoring for unusual privilege escalations, and segmenting networks to limit lateral movement.
This fits a broader pattern. Over the past 10 months, Microsoft has been tackling a wave of remote desktop flaws, from the high-severity CVE-2025-48817 disclosed four months ago to the heap overflow in CVE-2025-29966 reported 10 months ago. .
Patch management and risk assessment need to kick in now. Security teams are advised to review Microsoft’s full advisory and test patches in staging environments to avoid disruptions. But it is not just about clicking Update.
Inventory every Remote Desktop Services deployment, then watch for suspicious privilege escalations. While CVE-2025-60703 serves as a reminder of enduring challenges in securing remote access protocols, it also underscores the need for a broader, layered security strategy.
Although Microsoft reports no public disclosure or evidence of active exploitation yet, history shows that unlikely exploitability can flip overnight once details are public. In the past six months, more than one RDS flaw started life with a low-risk label, then researchers proved reliable exploitation.
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