| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| The default configuration of the New Atlanta BlueDragon administrative interface in MediaCAST 8 and earlier enables external TCP connections to port 10000, instead of connections only from 127.0.0.1, which makes it easier for remote attackers to have an unspecified impact via a TCP session. |
| script-login in Dovecot 2.0.x before 2.0.13 does not follow the user and group configuration settings, which might allow remote authenticated users to bypass intended access restrictions by leveraging a script. |
| Hastymail2 before RC 8 does not set the secure flag for the session cookie in an https session, which makes it easier for remote attackers to capture this cookie by intercepting its transmission within an http session. |
| The UPnP IGD implementation in the Broadcom UPnP stack on the Cisco Linksys WRT54G with firmware before 4.30.5, WRT54GS v1 through v3 with firmware before 4.71.1, and WRT54GS v4 with firmware before 1.06.1 allows remote attackers to establish arbitrary port mappings by sending a UPnP AddPortMapping action in a SOAP request to the WAN interface, related to an "external forwarding" vulnerability. |
| The UPnP IGD implementation on the Cisco Linksys WRT54GX with firmware 2.00.05, when UPnP is enabled, configures the SOAP server to listen on the WAN port, which allows remote attackers to administer the firewall via SOAP requests. |
| The UPnP IGD implementation in Edimax EdiLinux on the Edimax BR-6104K with firmware before 3.25, Edimax 6114Wg, Canyon-Tech CN-WF512 with firmware 1.83, Canyon-Tech CN-WF514 with firmware 2.08, Sitecom WL-153 with firmware before 1.39, and Sweex LB000021 with firmware 3.15 allows remote attackers to establish arbitrary port mappings by sending a UPnP AddPortMapping action in a SOAP request to the WAN interface, related to an "external forwarding" vulnerability. |
| The UPnP IGD implementation in Broadcom Linux on the Sitecom WL-111 allows remote attackers to establish arbitrary port mappings by sending a UPnP AddPortMapping action in a SOAP request to the WAN interface, related to an "external forwarding" vulnerability. |
| The UPnP IGD implementation in the Pseudo ICS UPnP software on the ZyXEL P-330W allows remote attackers to establish arbitrary port mappings by sending a UPnP AddPortMapping action in a SOAP request to the WAN interface, related to an "external forwarding" vulnerability. |
| The UPnP IGD implementation on SpeedTouch 5x6 devices with firmware before 6.2.29 allows remote attackers to establish arbitrary port mappings by sending a UPnP AddPortMapping action in a SOAP request to the WAN interface, related to an "external forwarding" vulnerability. |
| The UPnP IGD implementation on the Thomson (aka Technicolor) TG585 with firmware 7.x before 7.4.3.2 allows remote attackers to establish arbitrary port mappings by sending a UPnP AddPortMapping action in a SOAP request to the WAN interface, related to an "external forwarding" vulnerability. |
| login/change_password.php in Moodle 1.9.x before 1.9.15 does not use https for the change-password form even if the httpslogin option is enabled, which allows remote attackers to obtain credentials by sniffing the network. |
| mod/forum/unsubscribeall.php in Moodle 2.1.x before 2.1.7 and 2.2.x before 2.2.4 does not consider whether a forum is optional, which allows remote authenticated users to bypass forum-subscription requirements by leveraging the student role and unsubscribing from all forums. |
| HTTPD in IBM Netezza Performance Portal 1.0.2 allows remote authenticated users to list application directories containing asset files via a direct request to a directory URI, as demonstrated by listing image files. |
| install.php in JCE-Tech PHP Calendars, downloaded 20100121, allows remote attackers to bypass intended access restrictions and modify application settings via a direct request. NOTE: this is only a vulnerability when the administrator does not follow recommendations in the product's installation documentation. |
| The pit_ioport_read function in the Programmable Interval Timer (PIT) emulation in i8254.c in KVM 83 does not properly use the pit_state data structure, which allows guest OS users to cause a denial of service (host OS crash or hang) by attempting to read the /dev/port file. |
| The default configuration of SMB File Server in Apple Mac OS X 10.5.8, and 10.6 before 10.6.4, enables support for wide links, which allows remote authenticated users to access arbitrary files via vectors involving symbolic links. NOTE: this might overlap CVE-2010-0926. |
| The default configuration of pluginlicense.ini for the SdcWebSecureBase interface in tgctlcm.dll in Consona Live Assistance, Dynamic Agent, and Subscriber Assistance, when downloaded from a server operated by Telefonica or possibly other companies, contains an incorrect DNS whitelist that includes the DNS hostnames of home computers of many persons, which allows remote attackers to bypass intended restrictions on ActiveX execution by hosting an ActiveX control on an applicable home web server. |
| The default configuration of HP Client Automation (HPCA) Enterprise Infrastructure (aka Radia) allows remote attackers to read log files, and consequently cause a denial of service or have unspecified other impact, via web requests. |
| The default configuration of the deployment descriptor (aka web.xml) in picketlink-sts.war in (1) the security_saml quickstart, (2) the webservice_proxy_security quickstart, (3) the web-console application, (4) the http-invoker application, (5) the gpd-deployer application, (6) the jbpm-console application, (7) the contract application, and (8) the uddi-console application in JBoss Enterprise SOA Platform before 5.0.2 contains GET and POST http-method elements, which allows remote attackers to bypass intended access restrictions via a crafted HTTP request. |
| The default configuration of SLiM before 1.3.2 places ./ (dot slash) at the beginning of the default_path option, which might allow local users to gain privileges via a Trojan horse program in the current working directory, related to slim.conf and cfg.cpp. |