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Oracle Breach Incident Score: Analysis & Impact (ORA1768994894)

The Rankiteo video explains how the company Oracle has been impacted by a Vulnerability on the date January 21, 2026.

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Incident Summary

Rankiteo Incident Impact
-1
Company Score Before Incident
479 / 1000
Company Score After Incident
478 / 1000
Company Link
Incident ID
ORA1768994894
Type of Cyber Incident
Vulnerability
Primary Vector
Remote
Data Exposed
Sensitive data
First Detected by Rankiteo
January 21, 2026
Last Updated Score
January 21, 2026

If the player does not load, you can open the video directly.

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Key Highlights From This Incident Analysis

  • Timeline of Oracle's Vulnerability and lateral movement inside company's environment.
  • Overview of affected data sets, including SSNs and PHI, and why they materially increase incident severity.
  • How Rankiteoโ€™s incident engine converts technical details into a normalized incident score.
  • How this cyber incident impacts Oracle Rankiteo cyber scoring and cyber rating.
  • Rankiteoโ€™s MITRE ATT&CK correlation analysis for this incident, with associated confidence level.
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Full Incident Analysis Transcript

In this Rankiteo incident briefing, we review the Oracle breach identified under incident ID ORA1768994894.

The analysis begins with a detailed overview of Oracle's information like the linkedin page: https://www.linkedin.com/company/oracle, the number of followers: 11005980, the industry type: IT Services and IT Consulting and the number of employees: 197447 employees

After the initial compromise, the video explains how Rankiteo's incident engine converts technical details into a normalized incident score. The incident score before the incident was 479 and after the incident was 478 with a difference of -1 which is could be a good indicator of the severity and impact of the incident.

In the next step of the video, we will analyze in more details the incident and the impact it had on Oracle and their customers.

Oracle recently reported "Oracle Discloses Critical Proxy Vulnerability in Fusion Middleware (CVE-2026-21962)", a noteworthy cybersecurity incident.

Oracle has revealed a severe security flaw (CVE-2026-21962) in its Fusion Middleware suite, specifically affecting the Oracle HTTP Server and WebLogic Server Proxy Plug-in.

The disruption is felt across the environment, affecting Oracle HTTP Server, WebLogic Server Proxy Plug-in, and exposing Sensitive data.

In response, moved swiftly to contain the threat with measures like Restricted network access to affected HTTP ports, and began remediation that includes Patches released in Critical Patch Update (CPU).

The case underscores how and recommending next steps like Apply patches from Oracle's Critical Patch Update (CPU) and restrict network access to affected HTTP ports if immediate patching is not possible.

Finally, we try to match the incident with the MITRE ATT&CK framework to see if there is any correlation between the incident and the MITRE ATT&CK framework.

The MITRE ATT&CK framework is a knowledge base of techniques and sub-techniques that are used to describe the tactics and procedures of cyber adversaries. It is a powerful tool for understanding the threat landscape and for developing effective defense strategies.

Rankiteo's analysis has identified several MITRE ATT&CK tactics and techniques associated with this incident, each with varying levels of confidence based on available evidence. Under the Initial Access tactic, the analysis identified Exploit Public-Facing Application (T1190) with high confidence (95%), supported by evidence indicating enables unauthenticated remote attackers to exploit systems without user interaction. Under the Privilege Escalation tactic, the analysis identified Exploitation for Privilege Escalation (T1068) with high confidence (90%), supported by evidence indicating scope Change (S such as C) metric indicates exploitation could extend beyond the plug-in. Under the Defense Evasion tactic, the analysis identified Impair Defenses: Disable or Modify Tools (T1562.001) with moderate to high confidence (80%), supported by evidence indicating attackers can bypass security controls entirely due to flaw in proxy layer. Under the Persistence tactic, the analysis identified Create Account (T1136) with moderate to high confidence (70%), supported by evidence indicating ability to create, delete, or modify system data. Under the Impact tactic, the analysis identified Data Destruction (T1485) with moderate to high confidence (80%), supported by evidence indicating ability to create, delete, or modify system data and Data Manipulation: Stored Data Manipulation (T1565.001) with moderate to high confidence (85%), supported by evidence indicating ability to create, delete, or modify system data. These correlations help security teams understand the attack chain and develop appropriate defensive measures based on the observed tactics and techniques.

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