Enterprise Vulnerabilities
From DHS/US-CERT's National Vulnerability Database
CVE-2022-45786PUBLISHED: 2023-02-04
There are issues with the AGE drivers for Golang and Python that enable SQL injections to occur. This impacts AGE for PostgreSQL 11 & AGE for PostgreSQL 12, all versions up-to-and-including 1.1.0, when using those drivers. The fix is to update to the latest Golang and Python drivers in addition ...
CVE-2023-22849PUBLISHED: 2023-02-04
An improper neutralization of input during web page generation ('Cross-site Scripting') [CWE-79] vulnerability in Sling App CMS version 1.1.4 and prior may allow an authenticated remote attacker to perform a reflected cross-site scripting (XSS) attack in multiple features. Upgrade to Apache Sling Ap...
CVE-2023-25193PUBLISHED: 2023-02-04hb-ot-layout-gsubgpos.hh in HarfBuzz through 6.0.0 allows attackers to trigger O(n^2) growth via consecutive marks during the process of looking back for base glyphs when attaching marks.
CVE-2023-0676PUBLISHED: 2023-02-04Cross-site Scripting (XSS) - Reflected in GitHub repository phpipam/phpipam prior to 1.5.1.
CVE-2023-0677PUBLISHED: 2023-02-04Cross-site Scripting (XSS) - Reflected in GitHub repository phpipam/phpipam prior to v1.5.1.
User Rank: Ninja
6/23/2014 | 7:14:17 PM
While I love the idea of Paul being an uber-lord of the Internet, I wonder how much whois information is actually available to private, non-government parties? Now, I've seen scripts that comb whois records, and for those that are private, tries matches through Google searches of like info (users with emails matching the [email protected] or [email protected] of the domain), etc. Essentially a hack to pull as much information together with what is already out there as possible toward identifying the registrar and populating a database. Hard to imagine a private party can get much more detailed information legally, unless Mr. Vixie is tied into PRISM... :-)