Total
652 CVE
CVE | Vendors | Products | Updated | CVSS v3.1 |
---|---|---|---|---|
CVE-2025-24011 | 1 Umbraco | 1 Umbraco Cms | 2025-02-20 | 5.3 Medium |
Umbraco is a free and open source .NET content management system. Starting in version 14.0.0 and prior to versions 14.3.2 and 15.1.2, it's possible to determine whether an account exists based on an analysis of response codes and timing of Umbraco management API responses. Versions 14.3.2 and 15.1.2 contain a patch. No known workarounds are available. | ||||
CVE-2022-41354 | 2 Linuxfoundation, Redhat | 2 Argo-cd, Openshift Gitops | 2025-02-19 | 4.3 Medium |
An access control issue in Argo CD v2.4.12 and below allows unauthenticated attackers to enumerate existing applications. | ||||
CVE-2023-26071 | 1 Harpaitalia | 1 Mcuboict | 2025-02-19 | 7.5 High |
An issue was discovered in MCUBO ICT through 10.12.4 (aka 6.0.2). An Observable Response Discrepancy can occur under the login web page. In particular, the web application provides different responses to incoming requests in a way that reveals internal state information to an unauthorized actor. That allow an unauthorized actor to perform User Enumeration attacks. | ||||
CVE-2024-27839 | 1 Apple | 3 Ipad Os, Ipados, Iphone Os | 2025-02-13 | 5.5 Medium |
A privacy issue was addressed by moving sensitive data to a more secure location. This issue is fixed in iOS 17.5 and iPadOS 17.5. A malicious application may be able to determine a user's current location. | ||||
CVE-2024-2408 | 3 Fedoraproject, Php, Redhat | 3 Fedora, Php, Enterprise Linux | 2025-02-13 | 5.9 Medium |
The openssl_private_decrypt function in PHP, when using PKCS1 padding (OPENSSL_PKCS1_PADDING, which is the default), is vulnerable to the Marvin Attack unless it is used with an OpenSSL version that includes the changes from this pull request: https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/13817 (rsa_pkcs1_implicit_rejection). These changes are part of OpenSSL 3.2 and have also been backported to stable versions of various Linux distributions, as well as to the PHP builds provided for Windows since the previous release. All distributors and builders should ensure that this version is used to prevent PHP from being vulnerable. PHP Windows builds for the versions 8.1.29, 8.2.20 and 8.3.8 and above include OpenSSL patches that fix the vulnerability. | ||||
CVE-2024-23218 | 1 Apple | 5 Ipados, Iphone Os, Macos and 2 more | 2025-02-13 | 5.9 Medium |
A timing side-channel issue was addressed with improvements to constant-time computation in cryptographic functions. This issue is fixed in macOS Sonoma 14.3, watchOS 10.3, tvOS 17.3, iOS 17.3 and iPadOS 17.3. An attacker may be able to decrypt legacy RSA PKCS#1 v1.5 ciphertexts without having the private key. | ||||
CVE-2023-6135 | 2 Mozilla, Redhat | 4 Firefox, Enterprise Linux, Rhel Eus and 1 more | 2025-02-13 | 4.3 Medium |
Multiple NSS NIST curves were susceptible to a side-channel attack known as "Minerva". This attack could potentially allow an attacker to recover the private key. This vulnerability affects Firefox < 121. | ||||
CVE-2023-5722 | 1 Mozilla | 1 Firefox | 2025-02-13 | 5.3 Medium |
Using iterative requests an attacker was able to learn the size of an opaque response, as well as the contents of a server-supplied Vary header. This vulnerability affects Firefox < 119. | ||||
CVE-2023-3897 | 1 42gears | 1 Suremdm | 2025-02-13 | 4.8 Medium |
Username enumeration is possible through Bypassing CAPTCHA in On-premise SureMDM Solution on Windows deployment allows attacker to enumerate local user information via error message. This issue affects SureMDM On-premise: 6.31 and below version | ||||
CVE-2023-1998 | 3 Debian, Linux, Redhat | 5 Debian Linux, Linux Kernel, Enterprise Linux and 2 more | 2025-02-13 | 5.6 Medium |
The Linux kernel allows userspace processes to enable mitigations by calling prctl with PR_SET_SPECULATION_CTRL which disables the speculation feature as well as by using seccomp. We had noticed that on VMs of at least one major cloud provider, the kernel still left the victim process exposed to attacks in some cases even after enabling the spectre-BTI mitigation with prctl. The same behavior can be observed on a bare-metal machine when forcing the mitigation to IBRS on boot command line. This happened because when plain IBRS was enabled (not enhanced IBRS), the kernel had some logic that determined that STIBP was not needed. The IBRS bit implicitly protects against cross-thread branch target injection. However, with legacy IBRS, the IBRS bit was cleared on returning to userspace, due to performance reasons, which disabled the implicit STIBP and left userspace threads vulnerable to cross-thread branch target injection against which STIBP protects. | ||||
CVE-2022-4304 | 3 Openssl, Redhat, Stormshield | 8 Openssl, Enterprise Linux, Jboss Core Services and 5 more | 2025-02-13 | 5.9 Medium |
A timing based side channel exists in the OpenSSL RSA Decryption implementation which could be sufficient to recover a plaintext across a network in a Bleichenbacher style attack. To achieve a successful decryption an attacker would have to be able to send a very large number of trial messages for decryption. The vulnerability affects all RSA padding modes: PKCS#1 v1.5, RSA-OEAP and RSASVE. For example, in a TLS connection, RSA is commonly used by a client to send an encrypted pre-master secret to the server. An attacker that had observed a genuine connection between a client and a server could use this flaw to send trial messages to the server and record the time taken to process them. After a sufficiently large number of messages the attacker could recover the pre-master secret used for the original connection and thus be able to decrypt the application data sent over that connection. | ||||
CVE-2023-45287 | 2 Golang, Redhat | 11 Go, Enterprise Linux, Migration Toolkit Applications and 8 more | 2025-02-13 | 7.5 High |
Before Go 1.20, the RSA based TLS key exchanges used the math/big library, which is not constant time. RSA blinding was applied to prevent timing attacks, but analysis shows this may not have been fully effective. In particular it appears as if the removal of PKCS#1 padding may leak timing information, which in turn could be used to recover session key bits. In Go 1.20, the crypto/tls library switched to a fully constant time RSA implementation, which we do not believe exhibits any timing side channels. | ||||
CVE-2023-28840 | 2 Mobyproject, Redhat | 2 Moby, Multicluster Engine | 2025-02-13 | 7.5 High |
Moby is an open source container framework developed by Docker Inc. that is distributed as Docker, Mirantis Container Runtime, and various other downstream projects/products. The Moby daemon component (`dockerd`), which is developed as moby/moby, is commonly referred to as *Docker*. Swarm Mode, which is compiled in and delivered by default in dockerd and is thus present in most major Moby downstreams, is a simple, built-in container orchestrator that is implemented through a combination of SwarmKit and supporting network code. The overlay network driver is a core feature of Swarm Mode, providing isolated virtual LANs that allow communication between containers and services across the cluster. This driver is an implementation/user of VXLAN, which encapsulates link-layer (Ethernet) frames in UDP datagrams that tag the frame with a VXLAN Network ID (VNI) that identifies the originating overlay network. In addition, the overlay network driver supports an optional, off-by-default encrypted mode, which is especially useful when VXLAN packets traverses an untrusted network between nodes. Encrypted overlay networks function by encapsulating the VXLAN datagrams through the use of the IPsec Encapsulating Security Payload protocol in Transport mode. By deploying IPSec encapsulation, encrypted overlay networks gain the additional properties of source authentication through cryptographic proof, data integrity through check-summing, and confidentiality through encryption. When setting an endpoint up on an encrypted overlay network, Moby installs three iptables (Linux kernel firewall) rules that enforce both incoming and outgoing IPSec. These rules rely on the u32 iptables extension provided by the xt_u32 kernel module to directly filter on a VXLAN packet's VNI field, so that IPSec guarantees can be enforced on encrypted overlay networks without interfering with other overlay networks or other users of VXLAN. Two iptables rules serve to filter incoming VXLAN datagrams with a VNI that corresponds to an encrypted network and discards unencrypted datagrams. The rules are appended to the end of the INPUT filter chain, following any rules that have been previously set by the system administrator. Administrator-set rules take precedence over the rules Moby sets to discard unencrypted VXLAN datagrams, which can potentially admit unencrypted datagrams that should have been discarded. The injection of arbitrary Ethernet frames can enable a Denial of Service attack. A sophisticated attacker may be able to establish a UDP or TCP connection by way of the container’s outbound gateway that would otherwise be blocked by a stateful firewall, or carry out other escalations beyond simple injection by smuggling packets into the overlay network. Patches are available in Moby releases 23.0.3 and 20.10.24. As Mirantis Container Runtime's 20.10 releases are numbered differently, users of that platform should update to 20.10.16. Some workarounds are available. Close the VXLAN port (by default, UDP port 4789) to incoming traffic at the Internet boundary to prevent all VXLAN packet injection, and/or ensure that the `xt_u32` kernel module is available on all nodes of the Swarm cluster. | ||||
CVE-2023-28200 | 1 Apple | 3 Ipados, Iphone Os, Macos | 2025-02-13 | 5.5 Medium |
A validation issue was addressed with improved input sanitization. This issue is fixed in macOS Ventura 13.3, iOS 15.7.4 and iPadOS 15.7.4, macOS Monterey 12.6.4, macOS Big Sur 11.7.5. An app may be able to disclose kernel memory. | ||||
CVE-2023-25000 | 2 Hashicorp, Redhat | 3 Vault, Openshift, Openshift Data Foundation | 2025-02-13 | 5 Medium |
HashiCorp Vault's implementation of Shamir's secret sharing used precomputed table lookups, and was vulnerable to cache-timing attacks. An attacker with access to, and the ability to observe a large number of unseal operations on the host through a side channel may reduce the search space of a brute force effort to recover the Shamir shares. Fixed in Vault 1.13.1, 1.12.5, and 1.11.9. | ||||
CVE-2022-41765 | 1 Mediawiki | 1 Mediawiki | 2025-02-13 | 5.3 Medium |
An issue was discovered in MediaWiki before 1.35.8, 1.36.x and 1.37.x before 1.37.5, and 1.38.x before 1.38.3. HTMLUserTextField exposes the existence of hidden users. | ||||
CVE-2022-40982 | 5 Debian, Intel, Netapp and 2 more | 1058 Debian Linux, Celeron 5205u, Celeron 5205u Firmware and 1055 more | 2025-02-13 | 6.5 Medium |
Information exposure through microarchitectural state after transient execution in certain vector execution units for some Intel(R) Processors may allow an authenticated user to potentially enable information disclosure via local access. | ||||
CVE-2020-1926 | 1 Apache | 1 Hive | 2025-02-13 | 5.9 Medium |
Apache Hive cookie signature verification used a non constant time comparison which is known to be vulnerable to timing attacks. This could allow recovery of another users cookie signature. The issue was addressed in Apache Hive 2.3.8 | ||||
CVE-2023-30308 | 2025-02-13 | 6.5 Medium | ||
An issue discovered in Ruijie EG210G-P, Ruijie EG105G-V2, Ruijie NBR, and Ruijie EG105G routers allows attackers to hijack TCP sessions which could lead to a denial of service. | ||||
CVE-2019-16782 | 4 Fedoraproject, Opensuse, Rack and 1 more | 6 Fedora, Leap, Rack and 3 more | 2025-02-13 | 6.3 Medium |
There's a possible information leak / session hijack vulnerability in Rack (RubyGem rack). This vulnerability is patched in versions 1.6.12 and 2.0.8. Attackers may be able to find and hijack sessions by using timing attacks targeting the session id. Session ids are usually stored and indexed in a database that uses some kind of scheme for speeding up lookups of that session id. By carefully measuring the amount of time it takes to look up a session, an attacker may be able to find a valid session id and hijack the session. The session id itself may be generated randomly, but the way the session is indexed by the backing store does not use a secure comparison. |