Headline
GHSA-3862-c622-v4fp: Cross-site Scripting in Backdrop CMS
A stored Cross-site scripting (XSS) issue in Text Editors and Formats in Backdrop CMS before 1.24.2 allows remote attackers to inject arbitrary web script or HTML via the name parameter. When a user is editing any content type (e.g., page, post, or card) as an admin, the stored XSS payload is executed upon selecting a malicious text formatting option.
NOTE: the vendor disputes the security relevance of this finding because “any administrator that can configure a text format could easily allow Full HTML anywhere.”
- GitHub Advisory Database
- GitHub Reviewed
- CVE-2023-31045
Cross-site Scripting in Backdrop CMS
Low severity GitHub Reviewed Published Apr 24, 2023 to the GitHub Advisory Database • Updated Apr 24, 2023
Package
composer backdrop/backdrop (Composer)
Affected versions
< 1.24.2
A stored Cross-site scripting (XSS) issue in Text Editors and Formats in Backdrop CMS before 1.24.2 allows remote attackers to inject arbitrary web script or HTML via the name parameter. When a user is editing any content type (e.g., page, post, or card) as an admin, the stored XSS payload is executed upon selecting a malicious text formatting option.
NOTE: the vendor disputes the security relevance of this finding because “any administrator that can configure a text format could easily allow Full HTML anywhere.”
References
- https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2023-31045
- backdrop/backdrop-issues#6065
- https://github.com/backdrop/backdrop/releases/tag/1.24.2
Published to the GitHub Advisory Database
Apr 24, 2023
Last updated
Apr 24, 2023
Related news
** DISPUTED ** A stored Cross-site scripting (XSS) issue in Text Editors and Formats in Backdrop CMS before 1.24.2 allows remote attackers to inject arbitrary web script or HTML via the name parameter. When a user is editing any content type (e.g., page, post, or card) as an admin, the stored XSS payload is executed upon selecting a malicious text formatting option. NOTE: the vendor disputes the security relevance of this finding because "any administrator that can configure a text format could easily allow Full HTML anywhere."