Microsoft released a patch for domain controllers earlier this month that fixes authentication issues caused by an update.
The company released a Windows Server update on May 10 to resolve a domain controller vulnerability (CVE-2022-26925). A domain controller is a server that centrally manages accessibility on a network, and the vulnerability could allow an attacker to gain access.
However, according to Microsoft, the update caused authentication problems due to an issue with assigning certificates to computer accounts. The American CISA (Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency) has even decided to temporarily remove CVE-2022-26925 from its list of vulnerabilities to prevent government agencies from installing the Windows update.
Although network administrators had to manually install the patch themselves, the issue is now resolved.
Source: Microsoft
Source: Hardware Info
