| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| In Octopus Deploy versions 2018.8.4 to 2019.7.6, when a web request proxy is configured, an authenticated user (in certain limited special-characters circumstances) could trigger a deployment that writes the web request proxy password to the deployment log in cleartext. This is fixed in 2019.7.7. The fix was back-ported to LTS 2019.6.7 as well as LTS 2019.3.8. |
| The handshake protocol in Object Management Group (OMG) DDS Security 1.1 sends cleartext information about all of the capabilities of a participant (including capabilities inapplicable to the current session), which makes it easier for attackers to discover potentially sensitive reachability information on a Data Distribution Service (DDS) network. |
| A security vulnerability exists in Zingbox Inspector versions 1.294 and earlier, that results in passwords for 3rd party integrations being stored in cleartext in device configuration. |
| JetBrains Toolbox before 1.15.5605 was resolving an internal URL via a cleartext http connection. |
| JetBrains IntelliJ IDEA before 2019.2 was resolving the markdown plantuml artifact download link via a cleartext http connection. |
| A vulnerability was found in Ansible Tower before 3.6.1 where an attacker with low privilege could retrieve usernames and passwords credentials from the new RHSM saved in plain text into the database at '/api/v2/config' when applying the Ansible Tower license. |
| A vulnerability was found in business-central, as shipped in rhdm-7.5.1 and rhpam-7.5.1, where encoded passwords are stored in errai_security_context. The encoding used for storing the passwords is Base64, not an encryption algorithm, and any recovery of these passwords could lead to user passwords being exposed. |
| A cleartext password storage issue was discovered in Katello, versions 3.x.x.x before katello 3.12.0.9. Registry credentials used during container image discovery were inadvertently logged without being masked. This flaw could expose the registry credentials to other privileged users. |
| An issue was discovered in the RENPHO application 3.0.0 for iOS. It transmits JSON data unencrypted to a server without an integrity check, if a user changes personal data in his profile tab (e.g., exposure of his birthday) or logs into his account (i.e., exposure of credentials). |
| In Enigmail below 2.1, an attacker in possession of PGP encrypted emails can wrap them as sub-parts within a crafted multipart email. The encrypted part(s) can further be hidden using HTML/CSS or ASCII newline characters. This modified multipart email can be re-sent by the attacker to the intended receiver. If the receiver replies to this (benign looking) email, he unknowingly leaks the plaintext of the encrypted message part(s) back to the attacker. This attack variant bypasses protection mechanisms implemented after the "EFAIL" attacks. |
| AdRem NetCrunch 10.6.0.4587 has an Improper Session Handling vulnerability in the NetCrunch web client, which can lead to an authentication bypass or escalation of privileges. |
| The TikTok (formerly Musical.ly) application 12.2.0 for Android and iOS performs unencrypted transmission of images, videos, and likes. This allows an attacker to extract private sensitive information by sniffing network traffic. |
| An issue was discovered on ABUS Secvest FUAA50000 3.01.01 devices. Due to an insufficient implementation of jamming detection, an attacker is able to suppress correctly received RF messages sent between wireless peripheral components, e.g., wireless detectors or remote controls, and the ABUS Secvest alarm central. An attacker is able to perform a "reactive jamming" attack. The reactive jamming simply detects the start of a RF message sent by a component of the ABUS Secvest wireless alarm system, for instance a wireless motion detector (FUBW50000) or a remote control (FUBE50014 or FUBE50015), and overlays it with random data before the original RF message ends. Thereby, the receiver (alarm central) is not able to properly decode the original transmitted signal. This enables an attacker to suppress correctly received RF messages of the wireless alarm system in an unauthorized manner, for instance status messages sent by a detector indicating an intrusion. |
| A vulnerability has been identified in Control Center Server (CCS) (All versions < V1.5.0). The user configuration menu in the web interface of the
Control Center Server (CCS) transfers user passwords in clear to the
client (browser).
An attacker with administrative privileges for the web interface could be
able to read (and not only reset) passwords of other CCS users. |
| A vulnerability has been identified in SINEMA Remote Connect Server (All versions < V2.0 SP1). An attacker with administrative privileges can obtain the hash of a connected device's password. The security vulnerability could be exploited by an attacker with network access to the SINEMA Remote Connect Server and administrative privileges. At the time of advisory publication no public exploitation of this security vulnerability was known. |
| One Identity Cloud Access Manager 8.1.3 does not use HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS), which may allow man-in-the-middle (MITM) attacks. This issue is fixed in version 8.1.4. |
| Search Guard versions before 23.1 had an issue that for aggregations clear text values of anonymised fields were leaked. |
| Search Guard versions before 24.0 had an issue that values of string arrays in documents are not properly anonymized. |
| The Voo branded NETGEAR CG3700b custom firmware V2.02.03 uses HTTP Basic Authentication over cleartext HTTP. |
| The Send Anywhere application 9.4.18 for Android stores confidential information insecurely on the system (i.e., in cleartext), which allows a non-root user to find out the username/password of a valid user via /data/data/com.estmob.android.sendanywhere/shared_prefs/sendanywhere_device.xml. |