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Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2017-13082
Disclosure Date: October 17, 2017 (last updated November 26, 2024)
Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA and WPA2) that supports IEEE 802.11r allows reinstallation of the Pairwise Transient Key (PTK) Temporal Key (TK) during the fast BSS transmission (FT) handshake, allowing an attacker within radio range to replay, decrypt, or spoof frames.
0
Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2017-13079
Disclosure Date: October 17, 2017 (last updated November 26, 2024)
Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA and WPA2) that supports IEEE 802.11w allows reinstallation of the Integrity Group Temporal Key (IGTK) during the four-way handshake, allowing an attacker within radio range to spoof frames from access points to clients.
0
Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2017-13087
Disclosure Date: October 17, 2017 (last updated November 26, 2024)
Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA and WPA2) that support 802.11v allows reinstallation of the Group Temporal Key (GTK) when processing a Wireless Network Management (WNM) Sleep Mode Response frame, allowing an attacker within radio range to replay frames from access points to clients.
0
Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2017-13078
Disclosure Date: October 17, 2017 (last updated November 26, 2024)
Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA and WPA2) allows reinstallation of the Group Temporal Key (GTK) during the four-way handshake, allowing an attacker within radio range to replay frames from access points to clients.
0
Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2017-13080
Disclosure Date: October 17, 2017 (last updated November 26, 2024)
Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA and WPA2) allows reinstallation of the Group Temporal Key (GTK) during the group key handshake, allowing an attacker within radio range to replay frames from access points to clients.
0
Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2017-13077
Disclosure Date: October 17, 2017 (last updated November 26, 2024)
Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA and WPA2) allows reinstallation of the Pairwise Transient Key (PTK) Temporal Key (TK) during the four-way handshake, allowing an attacker within radio range to replay, decrypt, or spoof frames.
0
Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2017-15041
Disclosure Date: October 05, 2017 (last updated November 26, 2024)
Go before 1.8.4 and 1.9.x before 1.9.1 allows "go get" remote command execution. Using custom domains, it is possible to arrange things so that example.com/pkg1 points to a Subversion repository but example.com/pkg1/pkg2 points to a Git repository. If the Subversion repository includes a Git checkout in its pkg2 directory and some other work is done to ensure the proper ordering of operations, "go get" can be tricked into reusing this Git checkout for the fetch of code from pkg2. If the Subversion repository's Git checkout has malicious commands in .git/hooks/, they will execute on the system running "go get."
0
Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2016-8743
Disclosure Date: July 27, 2017 (last updated November 08, 2023)
Apache HTTP Server, in all releases prior to 2.2.32 and 2.4.25, was liberal in the whitespace accepted from requests and sent in response lines and headers. Accepting these different behaviors represented a security concern when httpd participates in any chain of proxies or interacts with back-end application servers, either through mod_proxy or using conventional CGI mechanisms, and may result in request smuggling, response splitting and cache pollution.
0
Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2017-9788
Disclosure Date: July 13, 2017 (last updated November 08, 2023)
In Apache httpd before 2.2.34 and 2.4.x before 2.4.27, the value placeholder in [Proxy-]Authorization headers of type 'Digest' was not initialized or reset before or between successive key=value assignments by mod_auth_digest. Providing an initial key with no '=' assignment could reflect the stale value of uninitialized pool memory used by the prior request, leading to leakage of potentially confidential information, and a segfault in other cases resulting in denial of service.
0
Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2017-5645
Disclosure Date: April 17, 2017 (last updated November 08, 2023)
In Apache Log4j 2.x before 2.8.2, when using the TCP socket server or UDP socket server to receive serialized log events from another application, a specially crafted binary payload can be sent that, when deserialized, can execute arbitrary code.
0