| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| The local MQTT broker does not enforce topic-level Access Control Lists (ACLs). This allows any client to subscribe using wildcard characters (# or +) to enumerate hidden network devices or publish rogue control commands. |
| The FieldX MDM adb messaging topic passes unverified payloads directly into Runtime.exec(), allowing command/instruction injection. |
| The hard-coded APK resource files never expire, and the shared scepter leads to information leaks and potential misuse. |
| The ai_cmd utility executes with full root permissions. It pipes socket inputs directly to popen(), paving the way for unauthenticated users to execute arbitrary root commands. |
| Unchecked public access permissions on a core Broadcast Receiver allow unauthorized local software components to invoke administrative operations. |
| The system fails to evaluate instructional permissions over multiple internal operation codes (opcodes), permitting unauthorized application installations or command executions. |
| The production build of the M3WebServer hard-codes its backend API keys, which can be easily intercepted through verbose error handling pages. |
| The summary service endpoint suffers from an IDOR vulnerability where it fails to verify user ownership of hardware serial numbers, exposing device data to scraping. |
| Overly permissive configuration settings on cloud storage containers expose active telemetry information publicly to the internet. |
| The debugging routine SCREEN_CLICK(5053) enables a connection to skip the standard device login prompt entirely and directly enter an interactive shell interface. |
| Internal multimedia session archives are accessible without authentication, exacerbated by loose Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) rules that allow cross-site theft. |
| Crucial management API endpoints for cellular eSIM allocation do not validate caller authorization, allowing remote profiles to be rewritten or deleted. |
| Leftover debug modules contain fixed credentials for internal AWS Cognito test sandboxes, risking asset exploitation. |
| System log files output unencrypted SMTP server authentication passwords alongside sensitive employee corporate identification data. |
| Incoming VPN network profile settings fail to process special characters safely, enabling command injection via malicious config files. |
| The system Binder boundary accepts unverified pass-through AT commands, giving local applications the power to read baseband files or disable cellular connectivity. |
| High-risk TrustAllCerts routines disable standard TLS certificate validation. Combined with hard-coded DES symmetric encryption keys, a Man-in-the-Middle (MITM) actor could decrypt network traffic. |
| Broadcast events allow malicious software to rewrite the device's default Mobile Device Management (MDM) endpoint address, shifting administrative ownership to an external attacker. |
| Leftover engineering diagnostics and factory-level diagnostic software remain exposed on retail builds, giving malicious apps write privileges to internal NVRAM registers. |
| The device encrypts data using AES-CBC with static zero-filled Initialization Vectors (IVs), making it susceptible to replay attacks and known-plaintext decryption. |