A DLL search order hijacking vulnerability in Thermalright TR-VISION HOME on Windows (64-bit) allows a local attacker to escalate privileges via DLL side-loading. The application loads certain dynamic-link library (DLL) dependencies using the default Windows search order, which includes directories that may be writable by non-privileged users.\n\n\n\nBecause these directories can be modified by unprivileged users, an attacker can place a malicious DLL with the same name as a legitimate dependency in a directory that is searched before trusted system locations. When the application is executed, which is always with administrative privileges, the malicious DLL is loaded instead of the legitimate library.\n\n\n\nThe application does not enforce restrictions on DLL loading locations and does not verify the integrity or digital signature of loaded libraries. As a result, attacker-controlled code may be executed within the security context of the application, allowing arbitrary code execution with elevated privileges.\n\n\n\nSuccessful exploitation requires that an attacker place a crafted malicious DLL in a user-writable directory that is included in the application's DLL search path and then cause the affected application to be executed. Once loaded, the malicious DLL runs with the same privileges as the application.\n\n\n\nThis issue affects \nTR-VISION HOME  versions up to and including 2.0.5.
Advisories

No advisories yet.

Fixes

Solution

The issue can be resolved by modifying the application to load DLL dependencies using absolute paths or by restricting DLL loading to trusted directories such as system library locations. Additionally, implementing digital signature verification for loaded libraries can prevent malicious DLLs from being executed.


Workaround

Until a vendor patch is available, administrators may mitigate the vulnerability by placing the legitimate DLL dependency in the application's installation directory, ensuring it is loaded before any user-controlled locations in the DLL search order. This reduces the likelihood that a malicious DLL placed in a user-writable directory will be loaded.\n\n\n\nAdditionally, administrators should ensure the application's installation directory is not writable by non-privileged users. Application control mechanisms such as Windows Defender Application Control (WDAC) or AppLocker may also be used to restrict the loading or execution of untrusted DLL files. The issue can be resolved by modifying the application to load DLL dependencies using absolute paths or by restricting DLL loading to trusted directories such as system library locations. Additionally, implementing digital signature verification for loaded libraries can prevent malicious DLLs from being executed.

History

Mon, 16 Mar 2026 07:30:00 +0000

Type Values Removed Values Added
Description A DLL search order hijacking vulnerability in Thermalright TR-VISION HOME on Windows (64-bit) allows a local attacker to escalate privileges via DLL side-loading. The application loads certain dynamic-link library (DLL) dependencies using the default Windows search order, which includes directories that may be writable by non-privileged users.\n\n\n\nBecause these directories can be modified by unprivileged users, an attacker can place a malicious DLL with the same name as a legitimate dependency in a directory that is searched before trusted system locations. When the application is executed, which is always with administrative privileges, the malicious DLL is loaded instead of the legitimate library.\n\n\n\nThe application does not enforce restrictions on DLL loading locations and does not verify the integrity or digital signature of loaded libraries. As a result, attacker-controlled code may be executed within the security context of the application, allowing arbitrary code execution with elevated privileges.\n\n\n\nSuccessful exploitation requires that an attacker place a crafted malicious DLL in a user-writable directory that is included in the application's DLL search path and then cause the affected application to be executed. Once loaded, the malicious DLL runs with the same privileges as the application.\n\n\n\nThis issue affects \nTR-VISION HOME  versions up to and including 2.0.5.
Title DLL Injection Privilege Escalation
Weaknesses CWE-829
References
Metrics cvssV4_0

{'score': 8.4, 'vector': 'CVSS:4.0/AV:L/AC:L/AT:N/PR:N/UI:A/VC:H/VI:H/VA:H/SC:N/SI:N/SA:N'}


Projects

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cve-icon MITRE

Status: PUBLISHED

Assigner: Toreon

Published:

Updated: 2026-03-16T07:14:07.366Z

Reserved: 2026-03-16T07:06:07.397Z

Link: CVE-2026-4255

cve-icon Vulnrichment

No data.

cve-icon NVD

No data.

cve-icon Redhat

No data.

cve-icon OpenCVE Enrichment

No data.

Weaknesses