The firmware in Lenovo Ultraslim dongles, as used with Lenovo Liteon SK-8861, Ultraslim Wireless, and Silver Silk keyboards and Liteon ZTM600 and Ultraslim Wireless mice, does not enforce incrementing AES counters, which allows remote attackers to inject encrypted keyboard input into the system by leveraging proximity to the dongle, aka a "KeyJack injection attack."
Logitec LAN-W300N/R routers with firmware before 2.27 do not properly restrict login access, which allows remote attackers to obtain administrative privileges and modify settings via vectors related to PPPoE authentication.
Multiple stack-based buffer overflows in the BackWeb Lite Install Runner ActiveX control in the BackWeb Web Package ActiveX object in LiteInstActivator.dll in BackWeb before 8.1.1.87, as used in Logitech Desktop Manager (LDM) before 2.56, allow remote attackers to execute arbitrary code via unspecified vectors.
Multiple stack-based buffer overflows in ActiveX controls (1) VibeC in (a) vibecontrol.dll, (2) CallManager and (3) ViewerClient in (b) StarClient.dll, (4) ComLink in (c) uicomlink.dll, and (5) WebCamXMP in (d) wcamxmp.dll in Logitech VideoCall allow remote attackers to cause a denial of service (browser crash) and execute arbitrary code via unspecified vectors.
Logitech iTouch keyboards allows attackers with physical access to the system to bypass the screen locking function and execute user-defined commands that have been assigned to a button.