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A missing permission check in Jenkins Thycotic Secret Server Plugin 1.0.2 and earlier allows attackers with Overall/Read permission to enumerate credentials IDs of credentials stored in Jenkins.
A missing permission check in Jenkins Fogbugz Plugin 2.2.17 and earlier allows attackers with Item/Read permission to trigger builds of jobs specified in a 'jobname' request parameter.
A missing permission check in Jenkins Quay.io trigger Plugin 0.1 and earlier allows unauthenticated attackers to trigger builds of jobs corresponding to the attacker-specified repository.
Jenkins WSO2 Oauth Plugin 1.0 and earlier does not mask the WSO2 Oauth client secret on the global configuration form, increasing the potential for attackers to observe and capture it.
Jenkins Image Tag Parameter Plugin 2.0 improperly introduces an option to opt out of SSL/TLS certificate validation when connecting to Docker registries, resulting in job configurations using Image Tag Parameters that were created before 2.0 having SSL/TLS certificate validation disabled by default.
Jenkins Quay.io trigger Plugin 0.1 and earlier does not limit URL schemes for repository homepage URLs submitted via Quay.io trigger webhooks, resulting in a stored cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability exploitable by attackers able to submit crafted Quay.io trigger webhook payloads.
Jenkins Thycotic DevOps Secrets Vault Plugin 1.0.0 and earlier does not properly mask (i.e., replace with asterisks) credentials in the build log when push mode for durable task logging is enabled.
A missing permission check in Jenkins Assembla merge request builder Plugin 1.1.13 and earlier allows unauthenticated attackers to trigger builds of jobs corresponding to the attacker-specified repository.
Jenkins NeuVector Vulnerability Scanner Plugin 1.22 and earlier unconditionally disables SSL/TLS certificate and hostname validation when connecting to a configured NeuVector Vulnerability Scanner server.
Ubuntu Security Notice 6013-1 - Xuewei Feng, Chuanpu Fu, Qi Li, Kun Sun, and Ke Xu discovered that the TCP implementation in the Linux kernel did not properly handle IPID assignment. A remote attacker could use this to cause a denial of service or inject forged data. Ke Sun, Alyssa Milburn, Henrique Kawakami, Emma Benoit, Igor Chervatyuk, Lisa Aichele, and Thais Moreira Hamasaki discovered that the Spectre Variant 2 mitigations for AMD processors on Linux were insufficient in some situations. A local attacker could possibly use this to expose sensitive information.