An issue was discovered in Mattermost Mobile Apps before 1.26.0. Cookie data can persist on a device after a logout.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 4.3.0, 4.2.1, and 4.1.2. It discloses the team creator's e-mail address to members.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 4.1.0, 4.0.4, and 3.10.3. It allows attackers to discover a team invite ID by requesting a JSON document.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 5.15.0. Login access control can be bypassed via crafted input.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 5.19.0. Attackers can discover private channels via the "get channel by name" API, aka MMSA-2020-0004.
Mattermost Boards plugin v0.10.0 and earlier fails to invalidate a session on the server-side when a user logged out of Boards, which allows an attacker to reuse old session token for authorization.
Mattermost 6.0.2 and earlier fails to sufficiently sanitize user's password in audit logs when user creation fails.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 5.9.0, 5.8.1, 5.7.3, and 4.10.8. It allows attackers to obtain sensitive information during a role change.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Mobile Apps before 1.26.0. A view cache can persist on a device after a logout.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 5.9.0, 5.8.1, 5.7.3, and 4.10.8. It allows attackers to obtain sensitive information about whether someone has 2FA enabled.
Mattermost fails to sanitize post metadata during audit logging resulting in permalinks contents being logged
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 5.8.0. It does not always generate a robots.txt file.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 5.16.1, 5.15.2, 5.14.5, and 5.9.6. It allows attackers to obtain sensitive information (local files) during legacy attachment migration.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 5.12.0. Use of a Proxy HTTP header, rather than the source address in an IP packet header, for obtaining IP address information was mishandled.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Mobile Apps before 1.26.0. Local logging is not blocked for sensitive information (e.g., server addresses or message content).
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 5.18.0, 5.17.2, 5.16.4, 5.15.4, and 5.9.7. There are weak permissions for configuration files.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 5.18.0. It has weak permissions for server-local file storage.
Mattermost Sever fails to redact the DB username and password before emitting an application log during server initialization.
Mattermost fails to redact from audit logs the user password during user creation and the user password hash in other operations if the experimental audit logging configuration was enabled (ExperimentalAuditSettings section in config).
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 3.2.0. Attackers could read LDAP fields via injection.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 3.2.0. The initial_load API disclosed unnecessary personal information.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 3.0.0. It does not ensure that a cookie is used over SSL.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 3.0.0. It allows attackers to obtain sensitive information about team URLs via an API.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Mobile Apps before 1.29.0. The iOS app allowed Single Sign-On cookies and Local Storage to remain after a logout, aka MMSA-2020-0013.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 4.1.0, 4.0.4, and 3.10.3. It allows attackers to discover team invite IDs via team API endpoints.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 3.8.2, 3.7.5, and 3.6.7. Weak hashing was used for e-mail invitations, OAuth, and e-mail verification tokens.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 4.2.0, 4.1.1, and 4.0.5. It allows attackers to obtain sensitive information (user statuses) via a REST API version 4 endpoint.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 3.9.0 when SAML is used. Encryption and signature verification are not mandatory.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 5.21.0. mmctl allows directory traversal via HTTP, aka MMSA-2020-0014.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Mobile Apps before 1.30.0. Authorization tokens can sometimes be disclosed to third-party servers, aka MMSA-2020-0018.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Mobile Apps before 1.31.2 on iOS. Unintended third-party servers could sometimes obtain authorization tokens, aka MMSA-2020-0022.
Mattermost fails to delete card attachments in Boards, allowing an attacker to access deleted attachments.
An issue was discovered in Mattermost Server before 5.20.0. Non-members can receive broadcasted team details via the update_team WebSocket event, aka MMSA-2020-0012.
Cleartext password storage exists on Peplink Balance 305, 380, 580, 710, 1350, and 2500 devices with firmware before fw-b305hw2_380hw6_580hw2_710hw3_1350hw2_2500-7.0.1-build2093. The files in question are /etc/waipass and /etc/roapass. In case one of these devices is compromised, the attacker can gain access to passwords and abuse them to compromise further systems.
Linear eMerge E3-Series devices have Cleartext Credentials in a Database.
tpm2-tools versions before 1.1.1 are vulnerable to a password leak due to transmitting password in plaintext from client to server when generating HMAC.
In ABB IP GATEWAY 3.39 and prior, some configuration files contain passwords stored in plain-text, which may allow an attacker to gain unauthorized access.
kedpm 0.5 and 1.0 creates a history file in ~/.kedpm/history that is written in cleartext. All of the commands performed in the password manager are written there. This can lead to the disclosure of the master password if the "password" command is used with an argument. The names of the password entries created and consulted are also accessible in cleartext.
A Plaintext Storage of a Password issue was discovered in Moxa OnCell G3110-HSPA Version 1.3 build 15082117 and previous versions, OnCell G3110-HSDPA Version 1.2 Build 09123015 and previous versions, OnCell G3150-HSDPA Version 1.4 Build 11051315 and previous versions, OnCell 5104-HSDPA, OnCell 5104-HSPA, and OnCell 5004-HSPA. The application's configuration file contains parameters that represent passwords in plaintext.
A Weak Cryptography for Passwords issue was discovered in General Electric (GE) Multilin SR 750 Feeder Protection Relay, firmware versions prior to Version 7.47; SR 760 Feeder Protection Relay, firmware versions prior to Version 7.47; SR 469 Motor Protection Relay, firmware versions prior to Version 5.23; SR 489 Generator Protection Relay, firmware versions prior to Version 4.06; SR 745 Transformer Protection Relay, firmware versions prior to Version 5.23; SR 369 Motor Protection Relay, all firmware versions; Multilin Universal Relay, firmware Version 6.0 and prior versions; and Multilin URplus (D90, C90, B95), all versions. Ciphertext versions of user passwords were created with a non-random initialization vector leaving them susceptible to dictionary attacks. Ciphertext of user passwords can be obtained from the front LCD panel of affected products and through issued Modbus commands.
Wireless IP Camera (P2P) WIFICAM devices have an "Apple Production IOS Push Services" private RSA key and certificate stored in /system/www/pem/ck.pem inside the firmware, which allows attackers to obtain sensitive information.
An Insufficiently Protected Credentials issue was discovered in Sierra Wireless AirLink Raven XE, all versions prior to 4.0.14, and AirLink Raven XT, all versions prior to 4.0.11. Sensitive information is insufficiently protected during transmission and vulnerable to sniffing, which could lead to information disclosure.
An issue was discovered in Honeywell XL Web II controller XL1000C500 XLWebExe-2-01-00 and prior, and XLWeb 500 XLWebExe-1-02-08 and prior. Password is stored in clear text.
NetIQ iManager before 3.0.3 delivered a SSL private key in a Java application (JAR file) for authentication to Sentinel, allowing attackers to extract and establish their own connections to the Sentinel appliance.
An Insufficiently Protected Credentials issue was discovered in Schneider Electric Modicon PLCs Modicon M241, all firmware versions, and Modicon M251, all firmware versions. Log-in credentials are sent over the network with Base64 encoding leaving them susceptible to sniffing. Sniffed credentials could then be used to log into the web application.
The Milwaukee ONE-KEY Android mobile application stores the master token in plaintext in the apk binary.
The SyncThru Web Service on Samsung SCX-6x55X printers allows an attacker to gain access to a list of SMB users and cleartext passwords by reading the HTML source code. Authentication is not required.
D-Link DIR-130 firmware version 1.23 and DIR-330 firmware version 1.12 do not sufficiently protect administrator credentials. The tools_admin.asp page discloses the administrator password in base64 encoding in the returned web page. A remote attacker with access to this page (potentially through a authentication bypass such as CVE-2017-3191) may obtain administrator credentials for the device.
An issue was discovered in portier vision 4.4.4.2 and 4.4.4.6. Passwords are stored using reversible encryption rather than as a hash value, and the used Vigenere algorithm is badly outdated. Moreover, the encryption key is static and too short. Due to this, the passwords stored by the application can be easily decrypted.
ONTAP Select Deploy administration utility versions 2.2 through 2.12.1 transmit credentials in plaintext.