| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| Successful exploitation of the vulnerability could allow an unauthenticated attacker to obtain a valid session ID with administrator privileges by spoofing the login request, potentially allowing the attacker to modify the behaviour of the access point. |
| When configured using SAML, a session fixation vulnerability in the GlobalProtect™ login enables an attacker to impersonate a legitimate authorized user and perform actions as that GlobalProtect user. This requires the legitimate user to first click on a malicious link provided by the attacker.
The SAML login for the PAN-OS® management interface is not affected. Additionally, this issue does not affect Cloud NGFW and all Prisma® Access instances are proactively patched. |
| Improper session management in Elber REBLE310 Firmware v5.5.1.R , Equipment Model: REBLE310/RX10/4ASI allows attackers to execute a session hijacking attack. |
| An attacker who can spoof the IP address and the User-Agent of a logged-in user can takeover the session because of flaws in the self-developed session management. If two users access the web interface from the same IP they are logged in as the other user. |
| The H2-DM1E PLC's authentication protocol appears to utilize either a custom encoding scheme or a challenge-response protocol. However, there's an observed anomaly in the H2-DM1E PLC's protocol execution, namely its acceptance of multiple distinct packets as valid authentication responses. This behavior deviates from standard security practices where a single, specific response or encoding pattern is expected for successful authentication. |
| A UAA configured with multiple identity zones, does not properly validate session information across those zones. A User authenticated against a corporate IDP can re-use their jsessionid to access other zones. |
| The application does not change the session token when using the login or logout functionality. An attacker can set a session token in the victim's browser (e.g. via XSS) and prompt the victim to log in (e.g. via a redirect to the login page). This results in the victim's account being taken over. |
| A Session Fixation vulnerability existed in Payload's SQLite adapter due to identifier reuse during account creation. A malicious attacker could create a new account, save its JSON Web Token (JWT), and then delete the account, which did not invalidate the JWT. As a result, the next newly created user would receive the same identifier, allowing the attacker to reuse the JWT to authenticate and perform actions as that user.
This issue has been fixed in version 3.44.0 of Payload. |
| All-Dynamics Software enlogic:show 2.0.2 contains a session fixation vulnerability that allows attackers to set a predefined PHP session identifier during the login process. Attackers can forge HTTP GET requests to welcome.php with a manipulated session token to bypass authentication and potentially execute cross-site request forgery attacks. |
| CKAN is an open-source DMS (data management system) for powering data hubs and data portals. Prior to 2.10.9 and 2.11.4, session ids could be fixed by an attacker if the site is configured with server-side session storage (CKAN uses cookie-based session storage by default). The attacker would need to either set a cookie on the victim's browser or steal the victim's currently valid session. Session identifiers are now regenerated after each login. This vulnerability has been fixed in CKAN 2.10.9 and 2.11.4 |
| This vulnerability allows the successful attacker to gain unauthorized access to a
configuration web page delivered by the integrated web Server of EIBPORT.
This issue affects EIBPORT V3 KNX: through 3.9.8; EIBPORT V3 KNX GSM: through 3.9.8. |
| A vulnerability was found in Bdtask Wholesale Inventory Management System up to 20240311. It has been declared as problematic. Affected by this vulnerability is an unknown functionality. The manipulation leads to session fixiation. The attack can be launched remotely. The exploit has been disclosed to the public and may be used. The identifier VDB-257245 was assigned to this vulnerability. NOTE: The vendor was contacted early about this disclosure but did not respond in any way. |
| A flaw was found in Keycloak. In Keycloak where a user can accidentally get access to another user's session if both use the same device and browser. This happens because Keycloak sometimes reuses session identifiers and doesn’t clean up properly during logout when browser cookies are missing. As a result, one user may receive tokens that belong to another user. |
| A malicious actor can fix the session of a PAM user by tricking the user to click on a specially crafted link to the PAM server. |
| Improper session management in D-Link Wireless N 300 ADSL2+ Modem Router DSL-124 ME_1.00 allows attackers to execute a session hijacking attack via spoofing the IP address of an authenticated user. |
| An improper session validation allows an unauthenticated attacker to cause certain request notifications to be executed in the context of an incorrect user by spoofing the client IP address. |
| ScadaBR 1.12.4 is vulnerable to Session Fixation. The application assigns a JSESSIONID session cookie to unauthenticated users and does not regenerate the session identifier after successful authentication. As a result, a session created prior to login becomes authenticated once the victim logs in, allowing an attacker who knows the session ID to hijack an authenticated session. |
| Screen SFT DAB 1.9.3 contains an authentication bypass vulnerability that allows attackers to exploit weak session management by reusing IP-bound session identifiers. Attackers can issue unauthorized requests to the device management API by leveraging the session binding mechanism to perform critical operations on the transmitter. |
| Screen SFT DAB 1.9.3 contains an authentication bypass vulnerability that allows attackers to change user passwords by exploiting weak session management controls. Attackers can reuse IP-bound session identifiers to issue unauthorized requests to the userManager API and modify user credentials without proper authentication. |
| Screen SFT DAB 1.9.3 contains a weak session management vulnerability that allows attackers to bypass authentication controls by reusing IP address-bound session identifiers. Attackers can exploit the vulnerable API by intercepting and reusing established sessions to remove user accounts without proper authorization. |