| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| The BlackBerry Collaboration Service in Research In Motion (RIM) BlackBerry Enterprise Server (BES) 5.0.3 through MR4 for Microsoft Exchange and Lotus Domino allows remote authenticated users to log into arbitrary user accounts associated with the same organization, and send messages, read messages, read contact lists, or cause a denial of service (login unavailability), via unspecified vectors. |
| Lotus Domino R5 prior to 5.0.7 allows a remote attacker to create a denial of service via repeated (>400) URL requests for DOS devices. |
| Lotus Domino 5.08 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (crash) via a SunRPC NULL command to port 443. |
| Lotus Domino R4 allows remote attackers to bypass access restrictions for files in the web root via an HTTP request appended with a "?" character, which is treated as a wildcard character and bypasses the web handlers. |
| Lotus Domino 5.0.5 and 5.0.8, and possibly other versions, allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (block access to databases that have not been previously accessed) via a URL that includes the . (dot) directory. |
| htcgibin.exe in Lotus Domino server 5.0.9a and earlier allows remote attackers to determine the physical pathname for the server via requests that contain certain MS-DOS device names such as com5, such as (1) a request with a .pl or .java extension, or (2) a request containing a large number of periods, which causes htcgibin.exe to leak the pathname in an error message. |
| Buffer overflow in SMTP service of Lotus Domino 5.0.4 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service and possibly execute arbitrary commands via a long ENVID keyword in the "MAIL FROM" command. |
| bindsock in Lotus Domino 5.07 on Solaris allows local users to create arbitrary files via a symlink attack on temporary files. |
| Lotus Domino 5.0.9a and earlier, even when configured with the 'DominoNoBanner=1' option, allows remote attackers to obtain potential sensitive information such as the version via a request for a non-existent .nsf database, which leaks the version in the HTTP banner. |
| Lotus Domino Server 5.0 and 6.0 allows remote attackers to read the source code for files via an HTTP request with a filename with a trailing dot. |
| Unknown vulnerability in the SMTP server in Lotus Domino 5.0 through 5.7 allows remote attackers to bypass mail relaying restrictions via crafted e-mail addresses in "RCPT TO" commands. |
| htcgibin.exe in Lotus Domino server 5.0.9a and earlier, when configured with the NoBanner setting, allows remote attackers to determine the version number of the server via a request that generates an HTTP 500 error code, which leaks the version in a hard-coded error message. |
| SMTP component of Lotus Domino 4.6.1 on AS/400, and possibly other operating systems, allows a remote attacker to crash the mail server via a long string. |
| Lotus Domino R5 prior to 5.0.7 allows a remote attacker to create a denial of service via repeated URL requests with the same HTTP headers, such as (1) Accept, (2) Accept-Charset, (3) Accept-Encoding, (4) Accept-Language, and (5) Content-Type. |
| Lotus Domino R5 prior to 5.0.7 allows a remote attacker to create a denial of service via HTTP requests containing certain combinations of UNICODE characters. |
| Lotus Domino R5 prior to 5.0.7 allows a remote attacker to create a denial of service via repeatedly sending large (> 10Kb) amounts of data to the DIIOP - CORBA service on TCP port 63148. |
| Lotus Domino R5 prior to 5.0.7 allows a remote attacker to create a denial of service via URL requests (>8Kb) containing a large number of '/' characters. |
| Lotus Domino 5.x allows remote attackers to read files or execute arbitrary code by requesting the ReplicaID of the Web Administrator template file (webadmin.ntf). |
| Lotus Domino Web Server 5.x allows remote attackers to gain sensitive information by accessing the default navigator $defaultNav via (1) URL encoding the request, or (2) directly requesting the ReplicaID. |
| Lotus Domino web server 5.08 allows remote attackers to determine the internal IP address of the server when NAT is enabled via a GET request that contains a long sequence of / (slash) characters. |