An information disclosure vulnerability exists in GitLab CE/EE <v12.3.2, <v12.2.6, and <v12.1.12 that allowed an attacker to view private system notes from a GraphQL endpoint.
An information disclosure exists in < 12.3.2, < 12.2.6, and < 12.1.12 for GitLab Community Edition (CE) and Enterprise Edition (EE) where the assignee(s) of a confidential issue in a private project would be disclosed to a guest via milestones.
An information disclosure exists in < 12.3.2, < 12.2.6, and < 12.1.12 for GitLab Community Edition (CE) and Enterprise Edition (EE). When an issue was moved to a public project from a private one, the associated private labels and the private project namespace would be disclosed through the GitLab API.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community Edition (CE) and Enterprise Edition (EE) 5.1 through 12.6.1. It has Incorrect Access Control.
An information disclosure vulnerability exists in GitLab CE/EE <v12.3.2, <v12.2.6, and <v12.1.12 that allowed project milestones to be disclosed via groups browsing.
An information exposure vulnerability exists in gitlab.com <v12.3.2, <v12.2.6, and <v12.1.10 when using the blocking merge request feature, it was possible for an unauthenticated user to see the head pipeline data of a public project even though pipeline visibility was restricted.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 8.13 through 11.11. Non-member users who subscribed to issue notifications could access the title of confidential issues through the unsubscription page. It allows Information Disclosure.
Information disclosure via GraphQL in GitLab CE/EE 13.1 and later exposes private group and project membership. This affects versions >=13.6 to <13.6.2, >=13.5 to <13.5.5, and >=13.1 to <13.4.7.
Information about the starred projects for private user profiles was exposed via the GraphQL API starting from 12.2 via the REST API. This affects GitLab >=12.2 to <13.4.7, >=13.5 to <13.5.5, and >=13.6 to <13.6.2.
A sensitive information disclosure vulnerability in GitLab affecting all versions from 15.0 prior to 15.8.5, 15.9 prior to 15.9.4 and 15.10 prior to 15.10.1 allows an attacker to view the count of internal notes for a given issue.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting versions starting from 15.1 before 15.8.5, 15.9 before 15.9.4, and 15.10 before 15.10.1. A maintainer could modify a webhook URL to leak masked webhook secrets by adding a new parameter to the url. This addresses an incomplete fix for CVE-2022-4342.
GitLab 11.7 through 12.8.1 allows Information Disclosure. Under certain group conditions, group epic information was unintentionally being disclosed.
GitLab EE/CE 8.17 to 12.9 is vulnerable to information leakage when querying a merge request widget.
An Information Exposure issue (issue 1 of 2) was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.7.8, 11.8.x before 11.8.4, and 11.9.x before 11.9.2. EXIF geolocation data were not removed from images when uploaded to GitLab. As a result, anyone with access to the uploaded image could obtain its geolocation, device, and software version data (if present).
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 11.x before 11.7.7 and 11.8.x before 11.8.3. It allows Information Disclosure.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 11.3.x and 11.4.x before 11.4.13, 11.5.x before 11.5.6, and 11.6.x before 11.6.1. It allows Information Exposure.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.4.13, 11.5.x before 11.5.6, and 11.6.x before 11.6.1. It allows Information Exposure.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.2.7, 11.3.x before 11.3.8, and 11.4.x before 11.4.3. It has Information Exposure Through Browser Caching.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 11.x before 11.2.7, 11.3.x before 11.3.8, and 11.4.x before 11.4.3. It allows Information Exposure via a Gitlab Prometheus integration.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community Edition 11.x before 11.1.8, 11.2.x before 11.2.5, and 11.3.x before 11.3.2. There is Information Exposure via Epic change descriptions.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community Edition 11.x before 11.1.8, 11.2.x before 11.2.5, and 11.3.x before 11.3.2. There is Information Exposure via the GFM markdown API.
GitLab Community Edition (CE) and Enterprise Edition (EE). 9.6 and later through 12.5 has Incorrect Access Control.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 11.2 through 12.2.1. Insufficient permission checks were being applied when displaying CI results, potentially exposing some CI metrics data to unauthorized users.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.2.7, 11.3.x before 11.3.8, and 11.4.x before 11.4.3. It has Information Exposure Through an Error Message.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 11.1.x before 11.1.8, 11.2.x before 11.2.5, and 11.3.x before 11.3.2. There is Information Exposure via the merge request JSON endpoint.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 11.3 through 12.3 when a sub group epic is added to a public group. It has Incorrect Access Control.
An information disclosure exists in < 12.3.2, < 12.2.6, and < 12.1.12 for GitLab Community Edition (CE) and Enterprise Edition (EE). The path of a private project, that used to be public, would be disclosed in the unsubscribe email link of issues and merge requests.
GitLab 12.2.2 and below contains a security vulnerability that allows a guest user in a private project to see the merge request ID associated to an issue via the activity timeline.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community Edition 11.9.x before 11.9.10 and 11.10.x before 11.10.2. It allows Information Disclosure. When an issue is moved to a private project, the private project namespace is leaked to unauthorized users with access to the original issue.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 11.8.x before 11.8.10, 11.9.x before 11.9.11, and 11.10.x before 11.10.3. It allows Information Disclosure. A small number of GitLab API endpoints would disclose project information when using a read_user scoped token.
An Incorrect Access Control issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 11.7.x before 11.7.4. GitLab Releases were vulnerable to an authorization issue that allowed users to view confidential issue and merge request titles of other projects.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab EE affecting all versions starting from 13.12 before 16.1.5, all versions starting from 16.2 before 16.2.5, all versions starting from 16.3 before 16.3.1 in which a project member can leak credentials stored in site profile.
A sensitive information leak issue has been discovered in all versions of DAST API scanner from 1.6.50 prior to 2.0.102, exposing the Authorization header in the vulnerability report
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions starting from 9.3 before 15.4.6, all versions starting from 15.5 before 15.5.5, all versions starting from 15.6 before 15.6.1. It was possible for a project maintainer to leak a webhook secret token by changing the webhook URL to an endpoint that allows them to capture request headers.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting from 12.9 before 15.1.6, all versions starting from 15.2 before 15.2.4, all versions starting from 15.3 before 15.3.2. It was possible to read repository content by an unauthorised user if a project member used a crafted link.
Tor before 0.2.2.34, when configured as a bridge, uses direct DirPort access instead of a Tor TLS connection for a directory fetch, which makes it easier for remote attackers to enumerate bridges by observing DirPort connections.
Information exposure vulnerability in One UI Home prior to SMR April-2022 Release 1 allows to access currently launched foreground app information without permission.
Using predictable index for attachments in Samsung Email prior to version 6.1.41.0 allows remote attackers to get attachments of another emails when users open the malicious attachment.
The default configuration of the web server for the Solaris Management Console (SMC) in Solaris 8, 9, and 10 enables the HTTP TRACE method, which could allow remote attackers to obtain sensitive information such as cookies and authentication data from HTTP headers.
The Control Panel in Parallels Plesk Panel 10.4.4_build20111103.18 does not include the HTTPOnly flag in a Set-Cookie header for a cookie, which makes it easier for remote attackers to obtain potentially sensitive information via script access to this cookie, as demonstrated by cookies used by help.php and certain other files.
Microsoft Visio 2003 SP3 2007 SP3, and 2010 SP1 allows remote attackers to read arbitrary files via an XML document containing an external entity declaration in conjunction with an entity reference, aka "XML External Entities Resolution Vulnerability."
Tor before 0.2.2.25-alpha, when configured as a relay without the Nickname configuration option, uses the local hostname as the Nickname value, which allows remote attackers to obtain potentially sensitive information by reading this value.
When serving resources from a network location using the NTFS file system, Apache Tomcat versions 10.0.0-M1 to 10.0.0-M9, 9.0.0.M1 to 9.0.39, 8.5.0 to 8.5.59 and 7.0.0 to 7.0.106 were susceptible to JSP source code disclosure in some configurations. The root cause was the unexpected behaviour of the JRE API File.getCanonicalPath() which in turn was caused by the inconsistent behaviour of the Windows API (FindFirstFileW) in some circumstances.
Brave Browser Desktop between versions 1.17 and 1.20 is vulnerable to information disclosure by way of DNS requests in Tor windows not flowing through Tor if adblocking was enabled.
VMware vRealize Orchestrator ((8.x prior to 8.6) contains an open redirect vulnerability due to improper path handling. A malicious actor may be able to redirect victim to an attacker controlled domain due to improper path handling in vRealize Orchestrator leading to sensitive information disclosure.
Nextcloud Deck before 1.2.7, 1.4.1 suffers from an information disclosure vulnerability when searches for sharees utilize the lookup server by default instead of only the local Nextcloud server unless a global search has been explicitly chosen by the user.
In Brave Desktop between versions 1.17 and 1.26.60, when adblocking is enabled and a proxy browser extension is installed, the CNAME adblocking feature issues DNS requests that used the system DNS settings instead of the extension's proxy settings, resulting in possible information disclosure.
Nextcloud Android App (com.nextcloud.client) before v3.16.0 is vulnerable to information disclosure due to searches for sharees being performed by default on the lookup server instead of only using the local Nextcloud server unless a global search has been explicitly chosen by the user.
In Spring Data REST versions 3.4.0 - 3.4.13, 3.5.0 - 3.5.5, and older unsupported versions, HTTP resources implemented by custom controllers using a configured base API path and a controller type-level request mapping are additionally exposed under URIs that can potentially be exposed for unauthorized access depending on the Spring Security configuration.
In Elasticsearch versions before 7.11.2 and 6.8.15 a document disclosure flaw was found when Document or Field Level Security is used. Search queries do not properly preserve security permissions when executing certain cross-cluster search queries. This could result in the search disclosing the existence of documents the attacker should not be able to view. This could result in an attacker gaining additional insight into potentially sensitive indices.