In Last-Minute Reversal, US Agency Extends Support for Cyber Vulnerability Database

By | April 17, 2025

U.S. officials will extend support for 11 months for a database of cyber weaknesses that plays a critical role in fighting bugs and hacks, a spokesperson said on Wednesday, just as the funding was due to run out.

The expected cut-off of payments for the non-profit MITRE Corp’s Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures database had spread alarm across the cybersecurity community.

The U.S.-backed database acts as a catalog for cyber weaknesses and allows IT administrators to quickly flag and triage the different bugs and hacks discovered daily.

The last-minute change of plan after the importance of the service was highlighted publicly is another instance of the confusion across government as U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration makes deep cuts to public spending.

Yosry Barsoum, vice president and director at the Center for Securing the Homeland at MITRE, said in a statement that a break in service for the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures Program and the Common Weakness Enumeration Program had been avoided.

“We appreciate the overwhelming support for these programs that have been expressed by the global cyber community, industry, and government over the last 24 hours,” Barsoum said.

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency said in an email the CVE program was invaluable and that it had executed an “option period on the contract to ensure there will be no lapse in critical CVE services.”

A spokesperson for the agency told Reuters in an email the funding would continue for another 11 months.

The government’s last-minute change drew “a sigh of relief,” said John Hammond, a researcher with the managed security company Huntress who was among the many who opposed the move to stop funding.

“I’m glad someone or something heard the voice of the community loud and clear,” Hammond said.

The uncertainty has already prompted some members of the cybersecurity community to invest in alternatives.

On Wednesday, a group calling itself the CVE Foundation unveiled a website that marketed itself as a bid to “ensure the long-term viability, stability, and independence” of the system. A message seeking comment from the organization did not immediately receive a response.

Topics USA Cyber

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