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  • Critical defect in Java security engine poses serious downstream security risks  – CyberScoop
AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | Critical defect in Java security engine poses serious downstream security risks  - CyberScoop

Critical defect in Java security engine poses serious downstream security risks  – CyberScoop

Posted on March 10, 2026 By Matt Kapko
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A maximum-severity vulnerability in pac4j, an open-source library integrated into hundreds of software packages and repositories, poses a significant security threat, but has thus far received scant attention.

The defect in the Java security engine, which handles authentication across multiple frameworks, has not been exploited in the wild since code review firm CodeAnt AI published a proof-of-concept exploit last week. The company discovered the vulnerability and privately reported it to pac4j’s maintainer, which disclosed the defect and released patches for affected versions of the library within two days.

Some researchers told CyberScoop they are concerned about the vulnerability — CVE-2026-29000 — because it affects a widely deployed Java security engine that attackers can exploit with relative ease.

“A threat actor only needs to access a server’s public RSA key to attempt exploitation,” researchers at Arctic Wolf Labs said in an email. 

These public keys, which are shared openly, are used to encrypt data and enable identity authentication. Attackers can trigger the defect and bypass authentication by forging a JSON Web Token (JWT) or deploy raw JSON claims via JSON Web Encryption (JWE) in pac4j-jwt to break into a system with the highest privileges.

“It is currently too early into the lifecycle of this vulnerability to tell if it will materialize into a major threat but the fact that it is a vulnerability in a library makes it more challenging to assess the potential risk,” researchers at Arctic Wolf Labs said. “Downstream consumers of the library may end up needing to issue their own advisories, as we’ve seen with other similar vulnerabilities in the past.”

Amartya Jha, co-founder and CEO at CodeAnt AI, warned that anyone with basic JWT knowledge can achieve exploitation. The vulnerability is a “logic flaw that no pattern-matching scanner or rule-based static application security testing tool would surface, because there’s no single line of code that’s wrong.”

The downstream security risk, as is often the case with open-source software, is widespread. The authentication module for pac4j is integrated into multiple frameworks, including Spring Security, Play Framework, Vert.x, Javalin and others, Jha said.

Many organizations may not realize they depend on pac4j-jwt because it’s not always declared in build files, he added. CodeAnt said it has contacted hundreds of maintainers in the past week to warn them that their packages and repositories are impacted by the vulnerability, which has a CVSS rating of 10.

Researchers haven’t observed any additional PoC exploit code, but they noted the exploit path is easy to reproduce. 

“The conditions for exploitation are favorable,” Jha said. “It’s pre-authentication, requires no secrets, the PoC is public, and the attack surface includes any internet-facing application or API gateway using the affected configuration. The window between public PoC and patch adoption is where the risk is highest.”

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