| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| Missing Integrity Check in Shelly TRV 20220811-152343/v2.1.8@5afc928c allows malicious users to create a backdoor by redirecting the device to an attacker-controlled machine which serves the manipulated firmware file. The device is updated with the manipulated firmware. |
| Reflected cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities in Trend Micro Mobile Security (Enterprise) could allow an exploit against an authenticated victim that visits a malicious link provided by an attacker.
Please note, this vulnerability is similar to, but not identical to, CVE-2023-41178. |
| An issue was discovered in SolaX Pocket WiFi 3 through 3.001.02. The device provides a WiFi access point for initial configuration. The WiFi network provided has no network authentication (such as an encryption key) and persists permanently, including after enrollment and setup is complete. The WiFi network serves a web-based configuration utility, as well as an unauthenticated ModBus protocol interface. |
| SpliceCom Maximiser Soft PBX v1.5 and before does not restrict excessive authentication attempts, allowing attackers to bypass authentication via a brute force attack. |
| Redis raft master-1b8bd86 to master-7b46079 was discovered to contain an ODR violation via the component hiredisAllocFns at /opt/fs/redisraft/deps/hiredis/alloc.c. |
| Buffer over-read vulnerability in the dtls_sha256_update function in Contiki-NG tinyDTLS through master branch 53a0d97 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via crafted data packet. |
| CloudLinux CageFS 7.0.8-2 or below insufficiently restricts file paths supplied to the sendmail proxy command. This allows local users to read and write arbitrary files of certain file formats outside the CageFS environment. |
| An issue was discovered in Infinera hiT 7300 5.60.50. Cleartext storage of sensitive password in firmware update packages allows attackers to access various appliance services via hardcoded credentials. |
| An issue was discovered in Infinera hiT 7300 5.60.50. Sensitive information inside diagnostic files (exported by the @CT application) allows an attacker to achieve loss of confidentiality by analyzing these files. |
| An issue was discovered in Infinera hiT 7300 5.60.50. A web application allows a remote privileged attacker to execute applications contained in a specific OS directory via HTTP invocations. |
| An issue was discovered in Infinera hiT 7300 5.60.50. A hidden SSH service (on the local management network interface) with hardcoded credentials allows attackers to access the appliance operating system (with highest privileges) via an SSH connection. |
| An issue was discovered in Infinera hiT 7300 5.60.50. Undocumented privileged functions in the @CT management application allow an attacker to activate remote SSH access to the appliance via an unexpected network interface. |
| An issue was discovered in Infinera hiT 7300 5.60.50. Cleartext storage of sensitive information in the memory of the @CT desktop management application allows guest OS administrators to obtain various users' passwords by accessing memory dumps of the desktop application. |
| An issue was discovered in Infinera hiT 7300 5.60.50. Hidden functionality in the web interface allows a remote authenticated attacker to access reserved information by accessing undocumented web applications. |
| Improper Control of Filename for Include/Require Statement in PHP Program ('PHP Remote File Inclusion') vulnerability in Estatik Mortgage Calculator Estatik allows PHP Local File Inclusion. This issue affects Mortgage Calculator Estatik: from n/a through 2.0.12. |
| Improper Neutralization of Special Elements used in an SQL Command ('SQL Injection') vulnerability in proxymis Interview allows SQL Injection. This issue affects Interview: from n/a through 1.01. |
| Improper Neutralization of Input During Web Page Generation ('Cross-site Scripting') vulnerability in aptivadadev Aptivada for WP allows DOM-Based XSS. This issue affects Aptivada for WP: from n/a through 2.0.0. |
| Argo CD is a declarative, GitOps continuous delivery tool for Kubernetes. The Argo CD API prior to versions 2.10-rc2, 2.9.4, 2.8.8, and 2.7.15 are vulnerable to a cross-server request forgery (CSRF) attack when the attacker has the ability to write HTML to a page on the same parent domain as Argo CD. A CSRF attack works by tricking an authenticated Argo CD user into loading a web page which contains code to call Argo CD API endpoints on the victim’s behalf. For example, an attacker could send an Argo CD user a link to a page which looks harmless but in the background calls an Argo CD API endpoint to create an application running malicious code. Argo CD uses the “Lax” SameSite cookie policy to prevent CSRF attacks where the attacker controls an external domain. The malicious external website can attempt to call the Argo CD API, but the web browser will refuse to send the Argo CD auth token with the request. Many companies host Argo CD on an internal subdomain. If an attacker can place malicious code on, for example, https://test.internal.example.com/, they can still perform a CSRF attack. In this case, the “Lax” SameSite cookie does not prevent the browser from sending the auth cookie, because the destination is a parent domain of the Argo CD API. Browsers generally block such attacks by applying CORS policies to sensitive requests with sensitive content types. Specifically, browsers will send a “preflight request” for POSTs with content type “application/json” asking the destination API “are you allowed to accept requests from my domain?” If the destination API does not answer “yes,” the browser will block the request. Before the patched versions, Argo CD did not validate that requests contained the correct content type header. So an attacker could bypass the browser’s CORS check by setting the content type to something which is considered “not sensitive” such as “text/plain.” The browser wouldn’t send the preflight request, and Argo CD would happily accept the contents (which are actually still JSON) and perform the requested action (such as running malicious code). A patch for this vulnerability has been released in the following Argo CD versions: 2.10-rc2, 2.9.4, 2.8.8, and 2.7.15. The patch contains a breaking API change. The Argo CD API will no longer accept non-GET requests which do not specify application/json as their Content-Type. The accepted content types list is configurable, and it is possible (but discouraged) to disable the content type check completely. Users are advised to upgrade. There are no known workarounds for this vulnerability. |
| IBM OpenPages with Watson 8.3 and 9.0 could allow remote attacker to bypass security restrictions, caused by insufficient authorization checks. By authenticating as an OpenPages user and using non-public APIs, an attacker could exploit this vulnerability to bypass security and gain unauthorized administrative access to the application. IBM X-Force ID: 264005. |
| A vulnerability classified as critical was found in D-Link DAP-1360, DIR-300, DIR-615, DIR-615GF, DIR-615S, DIR-615T, DIR-620, DIR-620S, DIR-806A, DIR-815, DIR-815AC, DIR-815S, DIR-816, DIR-820, DIR-822, DIR-825, DIR-825AC, DIR-825ACF, DIR-825ACG1, DIR-841, DIR-842, DIR-842S, DIR-843, DIR-853, DIR-878, DIR-882, DIR-1210, DIR-1260, DIR-2150, DIR-X1530, DIR-X1860, DSL-224, DSL-245GR, DSL-2640U, DSL-2750U, DSL-G2452GR, DVG-5402G, DVG-5402G, DVG-5402GFRU, DVG-N5402G, DVG-N5402G-IL, DWM-312W, DWM-321, DWR-921, DWR-953 and Good Line Router v2 up to 20240112. This vulnerability affects unknown code of the file /devinfo of the component HTTP GET Request Handler. The manipulation of the argument area with the input notice|net|version leads to information disclosure. The attack can be initiated remotely. The exploit has been disclosed to the public and may be used. VDB-251542 is the identifier assigned to this vulnerability. |