This article covers recent vulnerabilities found to be actively exploited. They are categorised based not only on the category of exploitation, but their impact, and versions affected. This article also informs on any official fix and remediation guidance for the listed vulnerabilities.
Category: Cross-Site Scripting (‘XSS’)
An issue was discovered in Roundcube Webmail before 1.3.12 and 1.4.x before 1.4.5. The product is vulnerable to cross-site scripting (‘XSS’) via a malicious XML attachment, because MIME type text/xml is among the allowed types for a preview. The product does not neutralize or incorrectly neutralizes user-controllable input before it is placed in output that is used as a web page that is served to other users.
The server reads data directly from the HTTP request and reflects it back in the HTTP response. Reflected XSS exploits occur when an attacker causes a victim to supply dangerous content to a vulnerable web application, which is then reflected back to the victim and executed by the web browser. The most common mechanism for delivering malicious content is to include it as a parameter in a URL that is posted publicly or e-mailed directly to the victim. URLs constructed in this manner constitute the core of many phishing schemes, whereby an attacker convinces a victim to visit a URL that refers to a vulnerable site. After the site reflects the attacker’s content back to the victim, the content is executed by the victim’s browser.
Customers are advised to upgrade to the latest version of the impacted product.
NOTE: Remediation of this vulnerability by patching to a specific version indicated may not be sufficient to secure the product against further vulnerabilities discovered in later versions, subsequent to the publication of this guidance. Unless contra-indicated, customers are therefore advised to always upgrade to the latest version of the product available.
Category: Memory Access Violation
It was discovered that a nft object or expression could reference a nft set on a different nft table, leading to a use-after-free once that table was deleted. The specific flaw exists within the handling of nft_objects. The issue results from the lack of validating the existence of an object prior to performing operations on the object.
This bug was introduced by commit 958bee14d071 (“netfilter: nf_tables: use new transaction infrastructure to handle sets”), which is present since v3.16-rc1.
Exploiting the vulnerability requires CAP_NET_ADMIN in any user or network namespace.
Linux has issued an update to correct this vulnerability. More details can be found at: https://seclists.org/oss-sec/2022/q3/114. Customers are advised to upgrade to the latest version of the impacted product.
NOTE: Remediation of this vulnerability by patching to a specific version indicated may not be sufficient to secure the product against further vulnerabilities discovered in later versions, subsequent to the publication of this guidance. Unless contra-indicated, customers are therefore advised to always upgrade to the latest version of the product available.
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AppCheck is a software security vendor based in the UK, offering a leading security scanning platform that automates the discovery of security flaws within organisations websites, applications, network and cloud infrastructure. AppCheck are authorized by te Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) Program aas a CVE Numbering Authority (CNA)