Enterprise Vulnerabilities
From DHS/US-CERT's National Vulnerability Database
CVE-2023-33196PUBLISHED: 2023-05-26Craft is a CMS for creating custom digital experiences. Cross site scripting (XSS) can be triggered by review volumes. This issue has been fixed in version 4.4.7.
CVE-2023-33185PUBLISHED: 2023-05-26
Django-SES is a drop-in mail backend for Django. The django_ses library implements a mail backend for Django using AWS Simple Email Service. The library exports the `SESEventWebhookView class` intended to receive signed requests from AWS to handle email bounces, subscriptions, etc. These requests ar...
CVE-2023-33187PUBLISHED: 2023-05-26
Highlight is an open source, full-stack monitoring platform. Highlight may record passwords on customer deployments when a password html input is switched to `type="text"` via a javascript "Show Password" button. This differs from the expected behavior which always obfuscates `ty...
CVE-2023-33194PUBLISHED: 2023-05-26
Craft is a CMS for creating custom digital experiences on the web.The platform does not filter input and encode output in Quick Post validation error message, which can deliver an XSS payload. Old CVE fixed the XSS in label HTML but didn’t fix it when clicking save. This issue was...
CVE-2023-2879PUBLISHED: 2023-05-26GDSDB infinite loop in Wireshark 4.0.0 to 4.0.5 and 3.6.0 to 3.6.13 allows denial of service via packet injection or crafted capture file
User Rank: Moderator
9/5/2012 | 12:46:36 AM
Security hole? Definitely. Avoidable? Definitely.
How much easier it would be, if all I had to remember was just one key word, of arbitrary length and, when I had to login to something, I was presented with an alphabet, and a string of corresponding random zero's and one's. All I'd have to do, is enter the numbers matching my word, and nobody, unless they read my mind, would know what my word was. If they tried copying what I'd typed, it wouldn't match the second set of random numbers. A nine-year old could do use it.
Oh, yes. When I entered my key word for the first time, or decided to change it, perhaps I could be presented with a random array of jpeg's of letters, which I could drag and drop into a field, so that malware didn't know what my new word was. That would be easier than typing, and a nine-year old could manage that, too. Perhaps there already is such an authentication system and, perhaps, a couple of banks, cloud providers and law-enforcement agencies are already implementing it. Perhaps it's described in a document at www.designsim.com.au/What_is_S....