Unspecified vulnerability in the Real User Experience Insight component in Oracle Enterprise Manager Grid Control 6.0 allows remote attackers to affect confidentiality and integrity via unknown vectors related to Processing. NOTE: the previous information was obtained from the January 2011 CPU. Oracle has not commented on claims from a reliable third party coordinator that this is SQL injection in rsynclogdird involving improper escaping of UTF-8 characters while processing log files.
Unspecified vulnerability in the Database Control component in EM Console in Oracle Database Server 10.1.0.5 and 10.2.0.3, Oracle Fusion Middleware 10.1.2.3 and 10.1.4.3, and Enterprise Manager Grid Control allows remote attackers to affect confidentiality, integrity, and availability via unknown vectors.
Unspecified vulnerability in the Console component in Oracle Enterprise Manager Grid Control 10.1.0.6 and 10.2.0.5 allows remote attackers to affect integrity via unknown vectors.
Unspecified vulnerability in the Oracle Thesaurus Management System component in Oracle E-Business Suite and OPA 4.5.2 Applications has unknown impact and attack vectors, aka Vuln# OPA01.
The PL/SQL module for the Oracle HTTP Server in Oracle Application Server 10g, when using the WE8ISO8859P1 character set, does not perform character conversions properly, which allows remote attackers to bypass access restrictions for certain procedures via an encoded URL with "%FF" encoded sequences that are improperly converted to "Y" characters.
Buffer overflow in extproc in Oracle 10g allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary code via environment variables in the library name, which are expanded after the length check is performed.
Directory traversal vulnerability in extproc in Oracle 9i and 10g allows remote attackers to access arbitrary libraries outside of the $ORACLE_HOME\bin directory.
Extproc in Oracle 9i and 10g does not require authentication to load a library or execute a function, which allows local users to execute arbitrary commands as the Oracle user.
Oracle 10g Database Server stores the password for the SYSMAN account in cleartext in the world-readable emoms.properties file, which could allow local users to gain DBA privileges.
Oracle 10g Database Server, when installed with a password that contains an exclamation point ("!") for the (1) DBSNMP or (2) SYSMAN user, generates an error that logs the password in the world-readable postDBCreation.log file, which could allow local users to obtain that password and use it against SYS or SYSTEM accounts, which may have been installed with the same password.