An issue was discovered in signmgr.dll 6.5.0.819 in Comodo Internet Security through 12.0. A DLL Preloading vulnerability allows an attacker to implant an unsigned DLL named iLog.dll in a partially unprotected product directory. This DLL is then loaded into a high-privileged service before the binary signature validation logic is loaded, and might bypass some of the self-defense mechanisms.
The Antivirus component in Comodo Internet Security before 5.3.174622.1216 does not check whether X.509 certificates in signed executable files have been revoked, which has unknown impact and remote attack vectors.
The Antivirus component in Comodo Internet Security before 4.1.150349.920 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (application crash) via a crafted file.
The Antivirus component in Comodo Internet Security before 5.4.189822.1355 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (application crash) via a crafted .PST file.
The Antivirus component in Comodo Internet Security before 5.3.175888.1227 does not properly check whether unspecified X.509 certificates are revoked, which has unknown impact and remote attack vectors.
The Antivirus component in Comodo Internet Security before 5.3.175888.1227 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (application crash) via a crafted compressed file.
The Antivirus component in Comodo Internet Security before 5.3.175888.1227 does not check whether X.509 certificates in signed executable files have been revoked, which has unknown impact and remote attack vectors.
Race condition in Comodo Internet Security before 4.1.149672.916 on Windows XP allows local users to bypass kernel-mode hook handlers, and execute dangerous code that would otherwise be blocked by a handler but not blocked by signature-based malware detection, via certain user-space memory changes during hook-handler execution, aka an argument-switch attack or a KHOBE attack.