Drupal’s Highly Critical SQL Injection Flaw Is Already Under Active Attack


CVE-2026-9082: Drupal’s Highly Critical SQL Injection Flaw Is Already Under Active Attack

Pierluigi Paganini
May 23, 2026

Attackers began exploiting Drupal SQL injection flaw CVE-2026-9082 within 48 hours of patch release.

Drupal issued a highly critical security patch on May 20 for CVE-2026-9082, a SQL injection vulnerability that allows unauthenticated attackers to compromise sites running PostgreSQL databases. The project maintainers warned ahead of the release that exploits could surface within hours or days. That prediction was accurate; exploitation attempts started almost immediately, and within 48 hours, security firms were tracking thousands of attacks in the wild.

The vulnerability sits in an API designed to sanitize database queries and prevent SQL injection. A flaw in that API means an attacker can send specially crafted requests and inject arbitrary SQL commands on sites using PostgreSQL. As Drupal put it in its advisory.

“A vulnerability in this API allows an attacker to send specially crafted requests, resulting in arbitrary SQL injection for sites using PostgreSQL databases. This can lead to information disclosure, and in some cases privilege escalation, remote code execution, or other attacks.” reads the advisory. “This vulnerability can be exploited by anonymous users.”

The result can range from information disclosure to privilege escalation and, in some configurations, remote code execution.

Not every Drupal site is affected, the flaw only impacts those running PostgreSQL as the database backend, which Drupal estimates at under 5 percent of all installations. That still translates to thousands of potentially vulnerable sites given that Drupal powers hundreds of thousands of websites globally, many of them in government, higher education, media, and enterprise environments.

The advisory for CVE-2026-9082 was updated on May 22, two days after the patch released, with a detail that confirmed what many had already suspected:

“The risk score has been updated to reflect that exploit attempts are now being detected in the wild.” reads the updated advisory.

Drupal uses the NIST CVSS scoring system where the maximum possible rating is 25, so a score of 23 puts this firmly in the “drop everything and patch” category.

Imperva researchers published data showing just how quickly attackers moved. The security firm reported observing over 15,000 exploitation attempts targeting nearly 6,000 sites across 65 countries in the first two days after disclosure. Almost half of those attacks were aimed at gaming and financial services websites, sectors where both credential theft and financial data access have immediate monetization paths.

“Since CVE-2026-9082 was released, Imperva has observed over 15,000 attack attempts targeting almost 6,000 individual sites across 65 countries. Attacks are primarily targeting Gaming and Financial Services sites so far, at collectively almost 50% of all attacks.” states Imperva. “This pattern suggests attackers and scanners are primarily attempting to identify exposed Drupal sites running vulnerable PostgreSQL-backed configurations. While the activity is currently dominated by reconnaissance and validation, the nature of the vulnerability means successful exploitation could quickly move from probing to data extraction or privilege escalation.”

Top targeted countries are the U.S. (61.8%), Singapore (6.6%), and Australia (6.3).

That is the detail that matters most for defenders right now. What is being observed at scale is still largely reconnaissance, attackers mapping out which sites are vulnerable, testing exploits, and confirming they work. The fact that it has not yet escalated to widespread data theft or system compromise is not a reason to wait. It is a window that will close.

For administrators running Drupal sites on PostgreSQL, the action is straightforward: apply the patch immediately. For those running MySQL or MariaDB, the vulnerability does not apply, but verifying which database backend a site is using is worth doing rather than assuming. And for anyone managing Drupal infrastructure who has not patched yet and is seeing unusual database query patterns or failed authentication attempts in logs, it is worth treating those as potentially hostile and investigating promptly.

The pattern Imperva is observing, widespread reconnaissance followed by selective exploitation, is how these campaigns typically unfold. The current phase is mapping. The next phase is harvesting. The window to get ahead of that transition is narrow and shrinking.

The last time Drupal saw active exploitation of a highly critical flaw was back in 2019, when a remote code execution bug was hit within days of the patch going live. Before that, the flaws known as Drupalgeddon and Drupalgeddon2 made headlines for being weaponized at scale to compromise tens of thousands of sites. Since 2019, Drupal’s track record has been notably cleaner, highly critical vulnerabilities have been rare, and when they do appear, widespread exploitation has not followed.

Follow me on Twitter: @securityaffairs and Facebook and Mastodon

Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, Drupal)







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Whoop MG on arm

The Whoop is one of the devices that Google’s rumored screenless health tracker would compete with.

Nina Raemont/ZDNET

Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google.


ZDNET’s key takeaways 

  • Google is poised to unveil a Whoop dupe soon. 
  • Steph Curry teased a screenless health band on his Instagram. 
  • Here’s what I’d like to see from a Google fitness band. 

Could Google’s latest fitness tracker return to its original, screenless Fitbit form? All signs say yes. Google has teased a screenless, Whoop-adjacent health tracker with the help of basketball star Steph Curry. A recent Instagram post from Curry shows him wearing a screenless, fabric band around his wrist, and the accompanying caption promotes “a new relationship with your health.” 

There are scant confirmed details on this next device, but rumors suggest the band will be called “Fitbit Air.” 

Also: I replaced my Whoop with a rival fitness band that has no monthly fees – and it’s nearly as good

Why a screenless fitness band? And why now? Google’s new device could be taking interest away from popular fitness brand Whoop. Whoop’s fitness band is on the more luxurious end of the health wearables spectrum. The company offers three subscription tiers, starting at $199, $239, and $359 annually. Google’s device, on the other hand, is rumored to be more affordable with the option to upgrade to Fitbit Premium. 

Google has the opportunity to make an accessibly priced fitness band with the rumored Fitbit Air and breathe new life into its older Fitbit product lineup, which hasn’t been updated in years. 

What I’m expecting 

Here’s what I expect to see and what I hope Google prioritizes in this new health tracker.

Given Fitbit’s bare-bones approach to fitness tracking, I assume Google will emphasize an affordable, accessible fitness band with the Fitbit Air. Most Fitbit products cost between $130 and $230, so I’m expecting this band to be on the lower end of that price range. I’d also expect Fitbit to give users a free trial of Fitbit Premium. 

Also: T-Mobile is practically giving away the Apple Watch Series 11 – here’s how to get one

A long, long, long battery life 

A smartwatch with a bright screen and integrations with an accompanying smartphone consumes a lot of power. That’s why some of the best smartwatches on the market have a middling battery life of one to two days, tops. 

A fitness band, on the other hand, is screenless. That makes the battery potential on this Fitbit Air double — or even triple — that of Google’s smartwatches.

Also: I use this 30-second routine to fix sluggish Samsung smartwatches – and it works every time

The Fitbit Inspire 3 has around 10 days of battery life — with a watch display. I hope the screenless Fitbit Air has at least 10 days of battery life, plus some change. Two weeks of battery life would be splendid. 

In addition to usage time, I also hope that a screenless fitness tracker addresses some of the issues Fitbit Inspire users have complained about. Many Inspire users report that the device’s screen died after a year of use. They could still access data through the app, but the screen was dysfunctional. Despite being a more affordable Google health tracker, the Fitbit Air should last users for a few years without any hardware issues — or at least I hope it does. 

Fitbit’s classically accurate heart rate measurements 

As Google’s Performance Advisor and the athlete teasing Google’s next device, Steph Curry is sending the message that this new device, one that offers wearers “a new relationship with your health,” will be built for athletes and exercise enthusiasts. I hope this device homes in on accurate heart rate measurements and advanced sensing, as other Fitbit devices do. 

Also: I walked 3,000 steps with my Apple Watch, Google Pixel, and Oura Ring – this tracker was most accurate

Like Whoop, I hope the insights the Fitbit Air provides are performance- and recovery-driven. Whoop grew in popularity for exactly this reason. Not only do Whoop users get their sleep and recovery score, but they also see, through graphs and health data illustrations, how their daily exercise exertion, strain, and sleep interact with and inform each other. 

I’m assuming that Fitbit Premium, with its AI-powered health coach and revamped app design, may do a lot of the heavy lifting for sleep and recovery insights with this new product. 

Also: Are AI health coach subscriptions a scam? My verdict after testing Fitbit’s for a month

But I also hope Google adds a few features on the app’s home screen that specifically target athletic strain and recovery, beyond the steps, sleep, readiness, and weekly exercise percentage already available on the Fitbit app’s main screen. 

Lots of customizable, distinct bands 

I hope the Fitbit Air is cheap — and the accompanying bands are even cheaper. If the rumors of affordability are true, then I’d hope Fitbit sells bands that can be worn with the device that match users’ styles and color preferences at a similarly affordable and accessible price point. Curry wears a gray-orange band in his teaser. I hope the colorways for this device are bold, patterned, and easily distinguishable from rival fitness bands. 





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