A reflected cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability in the /overview/network/ endpoint of Austrian Archaeological Institute Openatlas before v8.12.0 allows attackers to execute arbitrary code in the context of a user's browser via injecting a crafted payload into the color parameter.
An issue was discovered in Free5GC v4.0.0 and v4.0.1 allowing an attacker to cause a denial of service via crafted POST request to the Nnssf_NSSAIAvailability API.
Incorrect access control in Austrian Archaeological Institute Openatlas before v8.12.0 allows attackers to access sensitive information via sending a crafted GET request to the /display_logo endpoint.
An issue in the size query parameter (/views/file.py) of Austrian Archaeological Institute Openatlas before v8.12.0 allows attackers to execute a path traversal via a crafted request.
A reflected cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability in the /overview/network/ endpoint of Austrian Archaeological Institute Openatlas before v8.12.0 allows attackers to execute arbitrary code in the context of a user's browser via injecting a crafted payload into the charge parameter.
An issue in Austrian Academy of Sciences (AW) Austrian Archaeological Institute OpenAtlas v.8.12.0 allows a remote attacker to obtain sensitive information via the login error messages
An issue was discovered in Free5GC v4.0.0 and v4.0.1 allowing an attacker to cause a denial of service via crafted POST request to the Npcf_BDTPolicyControl API.
Fluent Bit in_forward input plugin does not properly enforce the security.users authentication mechanism under certain configuration conditions. This allows remote attackers with network access to the Fluent Bit instance exposing the forward input to send unauthenticated data. By bypassing authentication controls, attackers can inject forged log records, flood alerting systems, or manipulate routing decisions, compromising the authenticity and integrity of ingested logs.
The extract_name function in Fluent Bit in_docker input plugin copies container names into a fixed size stack buffer without validating length. An attacker who can create containers or control container names, can supply a long name that overflows the buffer, leading to process crash or arbitrary code execution.