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pgAdmin <= 8.5 is affected by a multi-factor authentication bypass vulnerability. This vulnerability allows an attacker with knowledge of a legitimate account’s username and password may authenticate to the application and perform sensitive actions within the application, such as managing files and executing SQL queries, regardless of the account’s MFA enrollment status.
There are some classics on this list — the ever-present “Password” password, Passw0rd (with a zero, not an “O”) and “123456.”
Jenkins Script Security Plugin provides a sandbox feature that allows low privileged users to define scripts, including Pipelines, that are generally safe to execute. Calls to code defined inside a sandboxed script are intercepted, and various allowlists are checked to determine whether the call is to be allowed. Multiple sandbox bypass vulnerabilities exist in Script Security Plugin 1335.vf07d9ce377a_e and earlier: - Crafted constructor bodies that invoke other constructors can be used to construct any subclassable type via implicit casts. - Sandbox-defined Groovy classes that shadow specific non-sandbox-defined classes can be used to construct any subclassable type. These vulnerabilities allow attackers with permission to define and run sandboxed scripts, including Pipelines, to bypass the sandbox protection and execute arbitrary code in the context of the Jenkins controller JVM. - These issues are caused by an incomplete fix of [SECURITY-2824](https://www.jenkins.io/security/ad...
A vulnerability was found in Wildfly’s management interface. Due to the lack of limitation of sockets for the management interface, it may be possible to cause a denial of service hitting the nofile limit as there is no possibility to configure or set a maximum number of connections.
Jenkins Script Security Plugin provides a sandbox feature that allows low privileged users to define scripts, including Pipelines, that are generally safe to execute. Calls to code defined inside a sandboxed script are intercepted, and various allowlists are checked to determine whether the call is to be allowed. Multiple sandbox bypass vulnerabilities exist in Script Security Plugin 1335.vf07d9ce377a_e and earlier: - Crafted constructor bodies that invoke other constructors can be used to construct any subclassable type via implicit casts. - Sandbox-defined Groovy classes that shadow specific non-sandbox-defined classes can be used to construct any subclassable type. These vulnerabilities allow attackers with permission to define and run sandboxed scripts, including Pipelines, to bypass the sandbox protection and execute arbitrary code in the context of the Jenkins controller JVM.
Jenkins Subversion Partial Release Manager Plugin 1.0.1 and earlier programmatically sets the Java system property `hudson.model.ParametersAction.keepUndefinedParameters` whenever a build is triggered from a release tag with the 'Svn-Partial Release Manager' SCM. Doing so disables the fix for [SECURITY-170](https://www.jenkins.io/security/advisory/2016-05-11/#arbitrary-build-parameters-are-passed-to-build-scripts-as-environment-variables) / CVE-2016-3721. As of publication of this advisory, there is no fix.
Jenkins Telegram Bot Plugin 1.4.0 and earlier stores the Telegram Bot token unencrypted in its global configuration file `jenkinsci.plugins.telegrambot.TelegramBotGlobalConfiguration.xml` on the Jenkins controller as part of its configuration. This token can be viewed by users with access to the Jenkins controller file system. As of publication of this advisory, there is no fix.
This vulnerability was a potential CSRF attack. When running the Firebase emulator suite, there is an export endpoint that is used normally to export data from running emulators. If a user was running the emulator and navigated to a malicious website with the exploit on a browser that allowed calls to localhost (ie Chrome before v94), the website could exfiltrate emulator data. We recommend upgrading past version 13.6.0 or [commit 068a2b08dc308c7ab4b569617f5fc8821237e3a0](https://github.com/firebase/firebase-tools/commit/068a2b08dc308c7ab4b569617f5fc8821237e3a0).
Outabox, an Australian firm that scanned faces for bars and clubs, suffered a breach that shows the problems with giving companies your biometric data.
Our researchers found fake sponsored search results that lead consumers to a typical fake Microsoft alert site set up by tech support scammers.