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Zimbra — Police !!link!!

The "Zimbra Police" in this context refers to the extortionists who, after deploying ransomware, leave a .txt file in the /opt/zimbra/jetty/webapps/zimbra/public/ directory titled POLICE_NOTICE.txt , ironically mimicking law enforcement language: "Your security negligence has been noted. A fine of 20 BTC is due immediately." The third pillar of the "Zimbra Police" is the forensic analyst. As Zimbra becomes a common entry point for breaches, incident response (IR) teams have developed specific triage playbooks.

In 2025, the question is no longer if the Zimbra Police will knock on your server’s port, but who will get there first—the good cops trying to save you, or the bad cops looking to cash in.

In the world of enterprise cybersecurity, certain names become synonymous with a specific kind of digital dread. For Microsoft Exchange administrators, it was ProxyLogon. For IT teams running Zimbra Collaboration Suite (ZCS) , the current boogeyman isn't just a piece of malware—it is the collective, unblinking stare of global law enforcement and threat actors, colloquially known as the "Zimbra Police." zimbra police

In a controversial move, police forces executed court-authorized operations to remotely patch vulnerable Zimbra servers belonging to private companies without their consent. Dubbed "Operation PowerOff" (an extension of the anti-DDoS botnet strategy), authorities scanned for the critical (an authentication bypass leading to RCE).

While technically illegal in many jurisdictions (unauthorized access is still unauthorized access), law enforcement argued that the servers were already compromised by cryptominers and ransomware. The "Zimbra Police" had become digital vigilantes, blurring the line between investigation and system administration. If law enforcement is the "good cop," the Vice Society and Monti ransomware gangs are the "bad cops." These groups have weaponized Zimbra exploits with surgical precision. The "Zimbra Police" in this context refers to

When they found a vulnerable server, the "good cops" didn't arrest anyone. Instead, they injected a script that forcibly patched the vulnerability and sent a message to the admin email: "Your server was vulnerable. We fixed it for you. Update your software."

That illusion shattered starting in 2021 with (an unauthenticated SQL injection) and exploded with CVE-2022-27924 (Memcached command injection). However, the watershed moment was CVE-2023-38750 —a remote code execution vulnerability that allowed unauthenticated attackers to drop webshells with the privileges of the zimbra user. In 2025, the question is no longer if

Enter the —a sardonic industry nickname for the swarm of automated threat hunters, bounty seekers, and forensic investigators who treat unpatched Zimbra instances like parked cars with unlocked doors. Operation PowerOff and the "Good Cop" Raids The most literal interpretation of "Zimbra Police" occurred in late 2023 and early 2024. International law enforcement agencies, including the French Gendarmerie (C3N) and Dutch Police (NHTCU) , began conducting "preventative hacks."