CVE-2025-54086 is an excess permissions vulnerability in the
Warehouse component of Absolute Secure Access prior to version 14.10. Attackers
with access to the local file system can read the Java keystore file. The
attack complexity is low, there are no attack requirements, the privileges
required are low and no user interaction is required. Impact to confidentiality
is low, there is no impact to integrity or availability.
CVE-2025-54087 is a server-side request forgery
vulnerability in Secure Access prior to version 14.10. Attackers with
administrative privileges can publish a crafted test HTTP request originating
from the Secure Access server. The attack complexity is high, there are no
attack requirements, and user interaction is required. There is no direct
impact to confidentiality, integrity, or availability. There is a low severity
subsequent system impact to integrity.
Vasion Print (formerly PrinterLogic) Virtual Appliance Host and Application (VA/SaaS deployments) store user passwords using unsalted SHA-512 hashes with a fall-back to unsalted SHA-1. The hashing is performed via PHP's `hash()` function in multiple files (server_write_requests_users.php, update_database.php, legacy/Login.php, tests/Unit/Api/IdpControllerTest.php). No per-user salt is used and the fast hash algorithms are unsuitable for password storage. An attacker who obtains the password database can recover cleartext passwords via offline dictionary or rainbow table attacks. The vulnerable code also contains logic that migrates legacy SHA-1 hashes to SHA-512 on login, further exposing users still on the old hash. This vulnerability was partially resolved, but still present within the legacy authentication platform.
Vasion Print (formerly PrinterLogic) Virtual Appliance Host and Application (VA/SaaS deployments) store a large number of sensitive credentials (database passwords, MySQL root password, SaaS keys, Portainer admin password, etc.) in cleartext files that are world-readable. Any local user - or any process that can read the host filesystem - can retrieve all of these secrets in plain text, leading to credential theft and full compromise of the appliance. The vendor does not consider this to be a security vulnerability as this product "follows a shared responsibility model, where administrators are expected to configure persistent storage encryption."
YOSHOP 2.0 suffers from an unauthenticated SQL injection in the goodsIds parameter of the /api/goods/listByIds endpoint. The getListByIds function concatenates user input into orderRaw('field(goods_id, ...)'), allowing attackers to: (a) enumerate or modify database data, including dumping admin password hashes; (b) write web-shell files or invoke xp_cmdshell, leading to remote code execution on servers configured with sufficient DB privileges.