Rockwell Automation MicroLogix 1400 PLC 1766-L32BWA, 1766-L32AWA, 1766-L32BXB, 1766-L32BWAA, 1766-L32AWAA, and 1766-L32BXBA devices have a hardcoded SNMP community, which makes it easier for remote attackers to load arbitrary firmware updates by leveraging knowledge of this community.
Security readout for executives and security teams
This flaw affects listed Rockwell Automation MicroLogix 1400 PLCs. A hardcoded SNMP community value can let a remote attacker, who knows that value, attempt arbitrary firmware updates. For industrial environments, unauthorized PLC firmware changes can disrupt operations or undermine trust in control equipment. Exposure is most relevant where affected PLCs have SNMP reachable from untrusted networks, engineering workstations, vendor access paths, or flat plant networks. Internet exposure would increase concern, but the provided sources do not state prevalence or confirmed exposed instances. Treat as high priority for affected industrial sites, especially where PLC management traffic crosses trust boundaries. The main business risk is unauthorized firmware modification causing operational disruption or loss of control-system integrity. Prioritize asset discovery, network restriction, and vendor guidance review. Mitigation focus: Identify whether listed MicroLogix 1400 models are deployed.; Restrict SNMP access to trusted management hosts only.; Block PLC management services from enterprise and internet-facing networks..
Prepared
Generated from the cited source records. This long-tail analysis has not been individually reviewed by a named human.
Potential ATT&CK relevance
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cwe · medium confidence lookup
CWE-798: Credential and account abuse lookup
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CWE-798 · source CWE mapping
Use of Hard-coded Credentials
Use of Hard-coded Credentials represents a recurring weakness pattern that can create exploitable paths when design, validation, or implementation controls are missing.