| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| The rtrlet web application in the Web Console in Novell ZENworks Asset Management (ZAM) 7.5 uses a hard-coded username of Ivanhoe and a hard-coded password of Scott for the (1) GetFile_Password and (2) GetConfigInfo_Password operations, which allows remote attackers to obtain sensitive information via a crafted rtrlet/rtr request for the HandleMaintenanceCalls function. |
| Henry Schein Dentrix G5 before 15.1.294 has a single internal-database password that is shared across different customers' installations, which allows remote attackers to obtain sensitive information about patients by leveraging knowledge of this password from another installation. |
| The Contact Customer Support feature in the TigerText Free Private Texting app before 3.1.402 for iOS sends a log-file e-mail message with unencrypted credentials, which allows remote attackers to obtain sensitive information by sniffing the network or leveraging access to an e-mail endpoint. |
| QNAP VioStor NVR devices with firmware 4.0.3, and the Surveillance Station Pro component in QNAP NAS, have a hardcoded guest account, which allows remote attackers to obtain web-server login access via unspecified vectors. |
| EMC RSA Authentication Manager 8.0 before P1 allows local users to discover cleartext operating-system passwords, HTTP plug-in proxy passwords, and SNMP communities by reading a (1) log file or (2) configuration file. |
| Open-Xchange Server before 6.20.7 rev14, 6.22.0 before rev13, and 6.22.1 before rev14 uses the crypt and SHA-1 algorithms for password hashing, which makes it easier for context-dependent attackers to obtain cleartext passwords via a brute-force attack. |
| The HP StoreOnce D2D backup system with software before 3.0.0 has a default password of badg3r5 for the HPSupport account, which allows remote attackers to obtain administrative access and delete data via an SSH session. |
| LeftHand OS (aka SAN iQ) 10.5 and earlier on HP StoreVirtual Storage devices does not provide a mechanism for disabling the HP Support challenge-response root-login feature, which makes it easier for remote attackers to obtain administrative access by leveraging knowledge of an unused one-time password. |
| TP-Link IP Cameras TL-SC3130, TL-SC3130G, TL-SC3171, TL-SC3171G, and possibly other models before beta firmware LM.1.6.18P12_sign6 have an empty password for the hardcoded "qmik" account, which allows remote attackers to obtain administrative access via a TELNET session. |
| EMC RSA Authentication Agent for PAM 7.0 before 7.0.2.1 enforces the maximum number of login attempts within the PAM-enabled application codebase, instead of within the Agent codebase, which makes it easier for remote attackers to discover correct login credentials via a brute-force attack. |
| EMC Replication Manager (RM) before 5.4.4 places encoded passwords in application log files, which makes it easier for local users to obtain sensitive information by reading a file and conducting an unspecified decoding attack. |
| EMC RSA Authentication Manager 8.0 before P2 and 7.1 before SP4 P26, as used in Appliance 3.0, does not omit the cleartext administrative password from trace logging in custom SDK applications, which allows local users to obtain sensitive information by reading the trace log file. |
| EMC VPLEX before VPLEX GeoSynchrony 5.2 SP1 uses cleartext for storage of the LDAP/AD bind password, which allows local users to obtain sensitive information by reading the management-server configuration file. |
| EMC Atmos before 2.1.4 has a blank password for the PostgreSQL account, which allows remote attackers to obtain sensitive administrative information via a database-server connection. |
| The portal in Cisco Prime Central for Hosted Collaboration Solution (HCS) places cleartext credentials in temporary files, which allows local users to obtain sensitive information by leveraging weak file permissions to read these files, aka Bug IDs CSCuh33735 and CSCuh34230. |
| IBM Data Studio Web Console 3.x before 3.2, Optim Performance Manager 5.x before 5.2, InfoSphere Optim Configuration Manager 2.x before 2.2, and DB2 Recovery Expert 2.x store unspecified authentication information in a cookie, which allows remote authenticated users to bypass intended access restrictions via unknown vectors. |
| The Intelligent Platform Management Interface (IPMI) implementation in Integrated Management Module (IMM) and Integrated Management Module II (IMM2) on IBM BladeCenter, Flex System, System x iDataPlex, and System x3### servers has a default password for the IPMI user account, which makes it easier for remote attackers to perform power-on, power-off, or reboot actions, or add or modify accounts, via unspecified vectors. |
| The SecureSphere Operations Manager (SOM) Management Server in Imperva SecureSphere 9.0.0.5 does not have an off autocomplete attribute for the password (aka j_password) field on the secsphLogin.jsp login page, which makes it easier for remote attackers to obtain access by leveraging an unattended workstation. |
| The SecureSphere Operations Manager (SOM) Management Server in Imperva SecureSphere 9.0.0.5 allows context-dependent attackers to obtain sensitive information by leveraging the presence of (1) a session ID in the jsessionid field to secsphLogin.jsp or (2) credentials in the j_password parameter to j_acegi_security_check, and reading (a) web-server access logs, (b) web-server Referer logs, or (c) the browser history. |
| The automatic update request in Nagstamont before 0.9.10 uses a cleartext base64 format for transmission of a username and password, which allows remote attackers to obtain sensitive information by sniffing the network. |