A remote unauthorized attacker may connect to the SIM1012, interact with the device and
change configuration settings. The adversary may also reset the SIM and in the worst case upload a
new firmware version to the device.
The LMS5xx uses hard-coded credentials, which potentially allow low-skilled
unauthorized remote attackers to reconfigure settings and /or disrupt the functionality of the device.
A remote unprivileged attacker can intercept the communication via e.g. Man-In-The-Middle, due to the absence of Transport Layer Security (TLS) in the SICK LMS5xx. This lack of encryption in the communication channel can lead to the unauthorized disclosure of sensitive information. The attacker can exploit this weakness to eavesdrop on the communication between the LMS5xx and the Client, and potentially manipulate the data being transmitted.
A remote unprivileged attacker can sent multiple packages to the LMS5xx to disrupt its availability through a TCP SYN-based denial-of-service (DDoS) attack.
By exploiting this vulnerability, an attacker can flood the targeted LMS5xx with a high volume of TCP SYN requests, overwhelming its resources and causing it to become unresponsive or unavailable for legitimate users.
The LMS5xx uses weak hash generation methods, resulting in the creation of insecure hashs. If an attacker manages to retrieve the hash, it could lead to collision attacks and the potential retrieval of the password.
Exposure of Sensitive Information to an Unauthorized Actor in the SICK ICR890-4 could allow an unauthenticated remote attacker to retrieve sensitive information about the system.
Improper Access Control in the SICK ICR890-4 could allow an unauthenticated remote attacker to gather information about the system and download data via the REST API by accessing
unauthenticated endpoints.
Cleartext Transmission of Sensitive Information in the SICK ICR890-4 could allow a
remote attacker to gather sensitive information by intercepting network traffic that is not encrypted.
Improper Access Control in the SICK ICR890-4 could allow an unauthenticated remote attacker to affect the availability of the device by changing settings of the device such as the IP
address based on missing access control.
Unauthenticated endpoints in the SICK ICR890-4 could allow an unauthenticated
remote attacker to retrieve sensitive information about the device via HTTP requests.