| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| Denial of service in AOL Instant Messenger when a remote attacker sends a malicious hyperlink to the receiving client, potentially causing a system crash. |
| The DHTML Edit ActiveX control in Internet Explorer allows remote attackers to read arbitrary files. |
| Internet Explorer 4.0 and 5.0 allows a remote attacker to execute security scripts in a different security context using malicious URLs, a variant of the "cross frame" vulnerability. |
| MSHTML.DLL in Internet Explorer 5.0 allows a remote attacker to paste a file name into the file upload intrinsic control, a variant of "untrusted scripted paste" as described in MS:MS98-013. |
| MSHTML.DLL in Internet Explorer 5.0 allows a remote attacker to learn information about a local user's files via an IMG SRC tag. |
| The prompt parsing in bash allows a local user to execute commands as another user by creating a directory with the name of the command to execute. |
| The ffingerd 1.19 allows remote attackers to identify users on the target system based on its responses. |
| rpc.statd allows remote attackers to forward RPC calls to the local operating system via the SM_MON and SM_NOTIFY commands, which in turn could be used to remotely exploit other bugs such as in automountd. |
| Denial of service in WinGate proxy through a buffer overflow in POP3. |
| A remote attacker can gain access to a file system using .. (dot dot) when accessing SMB shares. |
| A Windows NT 4.0 user can gain administrative rights by forcing NtOpenProcessToken to succeed regardless of the user's permissions, aka GetAdmin. |
| TFTP is not running in a restricted directory, allowing a remote attacker to access sensitive information such as password files. |
| NETBIOS share information may be published through SNMP registry keys in NT. |
| A Unix account has a guessable password. |
| A Unix account has a default, null, blank, or missing password. |
| A Windows NT local user or administrator account has a guessable password. |
| A Windows NT local user or administrator account has a default, null, blank, or missing password. |
| A Windows NT domain user or administrator account has a guessable password. |
| A Windows NT domain user or administrator account has a default, null, blank, or missing password. |
| An account on a router, firewall, or other network device has a guessable password. |