Show filters
190 Total Results
Displaying 31-40 of 190
Sort by:
Attacker Value
Unknown

CVE-2022-0330

Disclosure Date: March 25, 2022 (last updated October 07, 2023)
A random memory access flaw was found in the Linux kernel's GPU i915 kernel driver functionality in the way a user may run malicious code on the GPU. This flaw allows a local user to crash the system or escalate their privileges on the system.
Attacker Value
Unknown

CVE-2022-0516

Disclosure Date: March 10, 2022 (last updated October 07, 2023)
A vulnerability was found in kvm_s390_guest_sida_op in the arch/s390/kvm/kvm-s390.c function in KVM for s390 in the Linux kernel. This flaw allows a local attacker with a normal user privilege to obtain unauthorized memory write access. This flaw affects Linux kernel versions prior to 5.17-rc4.
Attacker Value
Unknown

CVE-2021-3733

Disclosure Date: March 10, 2022 (last updated November 29, 2024)
There's a flaw in urllib's AbstractBasicAuthHandler class. An attacker who controls a malicious HTTP server that an HTTP client (such as web browser) connects to, could trigger a Regular Expression Denial of Service (ReDOS) during an authentication request with a specially crafted payload that is sent by the server to the client. The greatest threat that this flaw poses is to application availability.
Attacker Value
Unknown

CVE-2021-3656

Disclosure Date: March 04, 2022 (last updated October 07, 2023)
A flaw was found in the KVM's AMD code for supporting SVM nested virtualization. The flaw occurs when processing the VMCB (virtual machine control block) provided by the L1 guest to spawn/handle a nested guest (L2). Due to improper validation of the "virt_ext" field, this issue could allow a malicious L1 to disable both VMLOAD/VMSAVE intercepts and VLS (Virtual VMLOAD/VMSAVE) for the L2 guest. As a result, the L2 guest would be allowed to read/write physical pages of the host, resulting in a crash of the entire system, leak of sensitive data or potential guest-to-host escape.
Attacker Value
Unknown

CVE-2021-3609

Disclosure Date: March 03, 2022 (last updated October 07, 2023)
.A flaw was found in the CAN BCM networking protocol in the Linux kernel, where a local attacker can abuse a flaw in the CAN subsystem to corrupt memory, crash the system or escalate privileges. This race condition in net/can/bcm.c in the Linux kernel allows for local privilege escalation to root.
Attacker Value
Unknown

CVE-2020-25719

Disclosure Date: February 18, 2022 (last updated October 07, 2023)
A flaw was found in the way Samba, as an Active Directory Domain Controller, implemented Kerberos name-based authentication. The Samba AD DC, could become confused about the user a ticket represents if it did not strictly require a Kerberos PAC and always use the SIDs found within. The result could include total domain compromise.
Attacker Value
Unknown

CVE-2020-25717

Disclosure Date: February 18, 2022 (last updated October 07, 2023)
A flaw was found in the way Samba maps domain users to local users. An authenticated attacker could use this flaw to cause possible privilege escalation.
Attacker Value
Unknown

CVE-2016-2124

Disclosure Date: February 18, 2022 (last updated October 07, 2023)
A flaw was found in the way samba implemented SMB1 authentication. An attacker could use this flaw to retrieve the plaintext password sent over the wire even if Kerberos authentication was required.
Attacker Value
Unknown

CVE-2021-3551

Disclosure Date: February 16, 2022 (last updated October 07, 2023)
A flaw was found in the PKI-server, where the spkispawn command, when run in debug mode, stores admin credentials in the installation log file. This flaw allows a local attacker to retrieve the file to obtain the admin password and gain admin privileges to the Dogtag CA manager. The highest threat from this vulnerability is to confidentiality.
Attacker Value
Unknown

CVE-2021-3621

Disclosure Date: December 23, 2021 (last updated March 05, 2024)
A flaw was found in SSSD, where the sssctl command was vulnerable to shell command injection via the logs-fetch and cache-expire subcommands. This flaw allows an attacker to trick the root user into running a specially crafted sssctl command, such as via sudo, to gain root access. The highest threat from this vulnerability is to confidentiality, integrity, as well as system availability.