| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| Vulnerability in wordpress plugin flickr-picture-backup v0.7, The code in flickr-picture-download.php doesn't check to see if the user is authenticated or that they have permission to upload files. |
| An issue was discovered in Tilde CMS 1.0.1. It is possible to bypass the implemented restrictions on arbitrary file upload via a filename.+php manipulation. |
| In CMS Made Simple (CMSMS) 2.2.2, remote authenticated administrators can upload a .php file via a FileManager action to admin/moduleinterface.php. |
| In CMS Made Simple (CMSMS) 2.2.2, remote authenticated administrators can upload a .php file via a CMSContentManager action to admin/moduleinterface.php, followed by a FilePicker action to admin/moduleinterface.php in which type=image is changed to type=file. |
| Arbitrary file upload vulnerability in com/dotmarketing/servlets/AjaxFileUploadServlet.class in dotCMS 4.1.1 allows remote authenticated administrators to upload .jsp files to arbitrary locations via directory traversal sequences in the fieldName parameter to servlets/ajax_file_upload. This results in arbitrary code execution by requesting the .jsp file at a /assets URI. |
| Arbitrary File Upload in resource.php of TecnoVISION DLX Spot Player4 version >1.5.10 allows remote authenticated users to upload arbitrary files leading to Remote Command Execution. |
| A directory traversal vulnerability in HPE BSM Platform Application Performance Management System Health product versions 9.26, 9.30 and 9.40, allows users to upload unrestricted files. |
| In BlackCat CMS 1.2, backend/addons/install.php allows remote authenticated users to execute arbitrary PHP code via a ZIP archive that contains a .php file. |
| OpenEMR 5.0.0 and prior allows low-privilege users to upload files of dangerous types which can result in arbitrary code execution within the context of the vulnerable application. |
| Unrestricted file uploads in Trend Micro Mobile Security (Enterprise) versions before 9.7 Patch 3 allow remote attackers to execute arbitrary code on vulnerable installations. |
| Multiple unrestricted file upload vulnerabilities in the (1) imageSubmit and (2) proof_submit functions in Claydip Laravel Airbnb Clone 1.0 allow remote authenticated users to execute arbitrary code by uploading a file with an executable extension, then accessing it via a direct request to the file in images/profile. |
| TeamWork Job Links allows Arbitrary File Upload in profileChange and coverChange. |
| Unrestricted File Upload exists in BigTree CMS through 4.2.18: if an attacker uploads an 'xxx.pht' or 'xxx.phtml' file, they could bypass a safety check and execute any code. |
| TeamWork Photo Fusion allows Arbitrary File Upload in changeAvatar and changeCover. |
| In Joomla! 3.2.0 through 3.6.5 (fixed in 3.7.0), inadequate MIME type checks allowed low-privilege users to upload swf files even if they were explicitly forbidden. |
| TeamWork TicketPlus allows Arbitrary File Upload in updateProfile. |
| Remote file upload vulnerability in Wordpress Plugin Mobile App Native 3.0. |
| Mojoomla Annual Maintenance Contract (AMC) Management System allows Arbitrary File Upload in profilesetting image handling. |
| osTicket 1.10.1 provides a functionality to upload 'html' files with associated formats. However, it does not properly validate the uploaded file's contents and thus accepts any type of file, such as with a tickets.php request that is modified with a .html extension changed to a .exe extension. An attacker can leverage this vulnerability to upload arbitrary files on the web application having malicious content. |
| October CMS through 1.0.428 does not prevent use of .htaccess in themes, which allows remote authenticated users to execute arbitrary PHP code by downloading a theme ZIP archive from /backend/cms/themes, and then uploading and importing a modified archive with two new files: a .php file and a .htaccess file. NOTE: the vendor says "I don't think [an attacker able to login to the system under an account that has access to manage/upload themes] is a threat model that we need to be considering. |