| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| 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. |
| 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. |
| 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. |
| Unauthenticated endpoints in the SICK ICR890-4 could allow an unauthenticated
remote attacker to retrieve sensitive information about the device via HTTP requests. |
| Improper Restriction of Excessive Authentication Attempts in the SICK ICR890-4
could allow a remote attacker to brute-force user credentials. |
| This CVE ID has been rejected or withdrawn by its CVE Numbering Authority. |
| Improper handling of a URL parameter may allow attackers to execute code in a user's browser after login. This can lead to the extraction of sensitive data. |
| The device is deployed with weak and publicly known default passwords for certain hidden user levels, increasing the risk of unauthorized access. This represents a high risk to the integrity of the system. |
| An attacker with low privileges may be able to trigger critical system functions such as reboot or factory reset without proper restrictions, potentially leading to service disruption or loss of configuration. |
| Improper input handling in a system endpoint may allow attackers to overload resources, causing a denial of service. |
| The application discloses all used components, versions and license information to unauthenticated actors, giving attackers the opportunity to target known security vulnerabilities of used components. |
| An attacker may gain unauthorized access to the host filesystem, potentially allowing them to read and modify system data. |
| Certain system functions may be accessed without proper authorization, allowing attackers to start, stop, or delete installed applications, potentially disrupting system operations. |
| Firmware update files may expose password hashes for system accounts, which could allow a remote attacker to recover credentials and gain unauthorized access to the device. |
| Improper validation of a login parameter may allow attackers to redirect users to malicious websites after authentication. This can lead to various risk including stealing credentials from unsuspecting users. |
| An attacker with limited permissions may still be able to write files to specific locations on the device, potentially leading to system manipulation. |
| An attacker with low privileges may be able to read files from specific directories on the device, potentially exposing sensitive information. |
| An attacker may exploit missing protection against clickjacking by tricking users into performing unintended actions through maliciously crafted web pages, leading to the extraction of sensitive data. |
| An attacker with administrative access may inject malicious content into the login page, potentially enabling cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks, leading to the extraction of sensitive data. |
| Certain requests pass the authentication token in the URL as string query parameter, making it vulnerable to theft through server logs, proxy logs and Referer headers, which could allow an attacker to hijack the user's session and gain unauthorized access. |