The Fortinet breach now circulating as FortiBleed has exposed administrator and VPN credentials for roughly 74,000 FortiGate firewalls across 194 countries — about half of every internet-facing FortiGate on the planet. It isn’t a new vulnerability, and that’s exactly why it’s dangerous. Here’s the plain-English version for Australian businesses.
- A dataset of credentials for ~74,000 FortiGate firewalls across 194 countries was found on an attacker-controlled server — roughly half of all internet-facing FortiGate devices.
- It is not a new vulnerability or zero-day. The credentials were harvested from device configuration files and earlier leaks that organisations never rotated.
- Plaintext credentials were stored alongside company profile data (revenue, sector) — organised for targeted follow-on attacks, not just resale.
- Researchers Bob Diachenko and Kevin Beaumont confirmed many of the logins are still valid and the devices still online.
- What to do: upgrade FortiOS (7.2.11 / 7.4.8 / 7.6.1), re-authenticate as admin, rotate all credentials, enable MFA on VPN, and check for unrecognised sessions.
Source: SecurityDiscovery.com research (Bob Diachenko), reported by Ars Technica, Help Net Security and BleepingComputer, June 2026.
A credential dump, not a new exploit
Security researcher Volodymyr “Bob” Diachenko discovered the dataset on a server controlled by the attackers — meaning the credentials were actively in use, not merely theoretically exposed. The collection covers some 74,000 FortiGate firewalls across 194 countries, and independent researcher Kevin Beaumont confirmed that many of the logins are real and current.
Crucially, this is not a new Fortinet vulnerability. No zero-day was used. The data was assembled from device configuration files and from credentials leaked in earlier Fortinet incidents that organisations never rotated. Alongside each entry sat company profile information — revenue, sector, size — suggesting the operators intended targeted follow-on attacks, not just credential resale. Organisations named in reporting include Oracle, Chevron, Samsung, Foxconn, Siemens, Accenture, DHL and Fortinet itself.
The attack chain, in plain terms
This worked because of operational gaps, not a flaw in the firewall itself. Attackers located internet-exposed FortiGate interfaces, pulled their configuration files, and cracked the stored password hashes offline. Valid logins then became silent footholds — some compromised devices were used as listening posts to capture still more credentials — and harvested logins were recycled back into the operation, combined with credentials from earlier Fortinet leaks.
FortiBleed in five stages — a credential-harvesting loop, not a single exploited flaw.
“When a vendor discloses something like this, the step that gets skipped is almost always credential rotation. Businesses will patch the firewall and feel covered — but if the old passwords were already in someone’s dataset and never changed, the patch doesn’t shut the door. Rotating credentials is the unglamorous step that actually matters.”— Brad Dixon, PIP
A recurring Fortinet credential problem
- 2021Roughly 500,000 FortiGate VPN credentials are leaked on a dark-web forum — the start of a long-running pattern.
- January 2025The “Belsen” leak exposes ~15,000 FortiGate device configurations, harvested via a known vulnerability.
- Since ~March 2026The FortiBleed credential-harvesting campaign runs quietly against internet-facing FortiGate devices.
- Mid-June 2026Bob Diachenko finds the exposed dataset on an attacker-controlled server and raises the alarm.
- 17–18 June 2026Reporting breaks (Ars Technica and others); Kevin Beaumont confirms the credentials are valid and devices are still online.
- June 2026Fortinet patches are available (FortiOS 7.2.11 / 7.4.8 / 7.6.1); remediation guidance follows from Arctic Wolf, SOCRadar and S-RM.
Why Australian businesses should care
FortiGate firewalls are widely deployed across Australian business — in IT services, construction, telecommunications and financial services, the sectors best represented in this dataset. If your perimeter runs on Fortinet, assume you are in scope until proven otherwise.
There is an Australian compliance dimension, too. Under the Privacy Act 1988 and the Notifiable Data Breaches scheme, if exposed credentials were used to reach personal information your organisation holds, you may be facing a notifiable data breach — regardless of which overseas vendor made the firewall. The ASD’s Australian Cyber Security Centre routinely issues guidance on Fortinet incidents and runs the Australian Cyber Security Hotline (1300 CYBER1) for organisations that need help. If you discover signs of compromise, that is the line to call — and where PIP’s incident response support picks up.
FortiBleed remediation checklist
Work through these in priority order. Patching alone is not enough — the credential steps are what actually close the door.
| Action | Priority |
|---|---|
| Rotate all FortiGate admin and VPN credentials immediately | Critical |
| Upgrade FortiOS to 7.2.11, 7.4.8 or 7.6.1 (enables stronger PBKDF2 hashing) | Critical |
| Log in as admin after upgrading — the stronger hash only applies once each admin re-authenticates | High |
| Audit active SSL VPN sessions for unrecognised logins | High |
| Enable multi-factor authentication (MFA) on all VPN access | High |
| Review Active Directory / RADIUS accounts linked to FortiGate access | High |
| Pull admin activity logs and check for anomalies going back 90 days | Medium |
| Engage a security partner if you are unsure of your exposure | Next step |
“Not a new vulnerability” does not mean “low urgency”. Any device that runs unpatched FortiOS, exposes its management interface to the internet, or uses credentials never rotated after earlier leaks remains exposed — patch status alone won’t save it. A security audit can confirm your exposure before an attacker does.
Common questions
Does FortiBleed affect all Fortinet FortiGate firewalls?
Is this a Fortinet product flaw or a user error?
What if I don’t know whether my business uses a FortiGate firewall?
Not sure if your network is exposed?
PIP reviews IT environments and credential security for Sydney businesses. If you run a Fortinet device — or aren’t sure what firewall you have — a security audit gives you a clear answer before an attacker does.
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