CVE-2022-41080 Details
Microsoft Exchange Server 2013, 2016, and 2019 have a high-severity privilege escalation vulnerability that allows an attacker to elevate their Exchange server privileges to SYSTEM privileges and execute arbitrary code.
View at NVD
Exploit prediction scoring system (EPSS) score for CVE-2022-41080
EPSS (Exploit Prediction Scoring System): EPSS predicts the likelihood that a vulnerability will be exploited in the wild. A higher percentage means a greater chance of an exploit occurring. The EPSS model produces a probability score between 0 and 1 (0 and 100%).
77.33 Probability of exploitation activity being observed over the next 30 days (99th percentile)
CVSS score for CVE-2022-41080
CVSS (Common Vulnerability Scoring System): An open framework owned and managed by FIRST.Org, Inc. that assigns a numerical score from 0 to 10 to software vulnerabilities to indicate their severity.
8.8 High
Products affected by CVE-2022-41080

CVE-2022-41080 Global Footprint

Top 10 Identified Countries

Country Observations Percentage
DE 4,550 19.66%
US 3,592 15.52%
RU 2,091 9.04%
FR 1,691 7.31%
GB 845 3.65%
IT 723 3.12%
AT 649 2.80%
CN 628 2.71%
NL 545 2.36%
CA 502 2.17%

Is CVE-2022-41080 part of your extended attack surface? Bitsight helps security leaders rapidly identify exposure and detect threats in order to prioritize, communicate, and mitigate risk.

View interactive product tours

CVE-2022-41080 Industry Footprint

Top 10 Identified Industries

*Service provider organizations (typically Technology and Telecommunications) are disproportionally represented in the results given their upstream ownership of end-user infrastructure. See our FAQs.

Industry* Observations Percentage
Telecommunications 6,891 63.65%
Technology 1,801 16.63%
Manufacturing 326 3.01%
Government/Politics 284 2.62%
Business Services 202 1.87%
Finance 151 1.39%
Engineering 140 1.29%
Education 134 1.24%
Energy/Resources 126 1.16%
Healthcare/Wellness 125 1.15%

Bitsight, the leading provider in Cyber Risk Management, introduced the next-generation internet scanner Bitsight Groma in May 2024. This technology continuously scans the entire internet to discover assets, collect asset attribution evidence, and identify an ever-growing set of security observations, such as vulnerabilities and misconfigurations. Groma’s scanning activities presently encompass:


  • 40 million-plus monitored organizations
  • 250 million-plus host names
  • 4 billion-plus routable IPv4 and IPv6 addresses

Greynoise’s recent study testifies the speed of Bitsight Groma.

Bitsight data discovery
Governance charcoal background

Bitsight TRACE team investigates security incidents and identifies vulnerabilities and threats.

View latest security research 

See what you’re up against across the expanding attack surface. Prioritize what matters most. And mitigate where you’re most vulnerable.

External Attack Surface Management