CISA issued an advisory on Thursday to inform organizations in the US about a critical vulnerability recently discovered in PTC’s Windchill product lifecycle management (PLM) software.
The vendor has yet to release patches for the flaw and says there is no evidence of in-the-wild attacks, but the response triggered by the disclosure of the vulnerability in Germany suggests that its exploitation is imminent.
Industrial software maker PTC says the vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2026-4681, affects its Windchill and FlexPLM products.
The security hole, rated critical, is related to the deserialization of untrusted data and it can be exploited by a remote, unauthenticated attacker for arbitrary code execution.
PTC is still working on patches for the vulnerability and in the meantime it has shared mitigations that customers can implement to prevent exploitation. The vendor has also released indicators of compromise (IoCs) to detect potential attacks.
Both CISA and its German counterpart, the BSI, have published regular advisories for CVE-2026-4681. While the agencies have not published urgent alerts, the vulnerability appears to have prompted urgent action in Germany.
According to Heise, police were deployed in various German states to physically alert companies about the risk posed by the vulnerability, a move described as ‘unprecedented’. Officers reportedly visited many companies, including some in the middle of the night.
One company targeted by police told Heise that its systems are not at risk due to the affected server only being accessible internally, while another said that while it is a PTC customer it does not use the products affected by CVE-2026-4681.
There do not appear to be any public reports of older PTC product vulnerabilities being exploited in the wild, which indicates that the vendor’s software has not historically been in threat actors’ crosshairs.
However, that does not mean CVE-2026-4681 will not be targeted, as sophisticated threat actors are known to quickly weaponize a wide range of vulnerabilities that can give them access to enterprise networks.
Researchers warned in the past that flaws in PTC products could be highly useful to threat actors in attacks targeting industrial organizations.
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