Vulnerabilities > Use of Password Hash With Insufficient Computational Effort
DATE | CVE | VULNERABILITY TITLE | RISK |
---|---|---|---|
2018-04-04 | CVE-2018-1447 | Use of Password Hash With Insufficient Computational Effort vulnerability in IBM products The GSKit (IBM Spectrum Protect 7.1 and 7.2) and (IBM Spectrum Protect Snapshot 4.1.3, 4.1.4, and 4.1.6) CMS KDB logic fails to salt the hash function resulting in weaker than expected protection of passwords. | 8.1 |
2017-08-01 | CVE-2017-11131 | Use of Password Hash With Insufficient Computational Effort vulnerability in Stashcat Heinekingmedia 0.0.80W/0.0.86W/1.7.5 An issue was discovered in heinekingmedia StashCat through 1.7.5 for Android, through 0.0.80w for Web, and through 0.0.86 for Desktop. | 5.9 |
2008-03-26 | CVE-2008-1526 | Use of Password Hash With Insufficient Computational Effort vulnerability in Zyxel products ZyXEL Prestige routers, including P-660, P-661, and P-662 models with firmware 3.40(PE9) and 3.40(AGD.2) through 3.40(AHQ.3), do not use a salt when calculating an MD5 password hash, which makes it easier for attackers to crack passwords. | 7.5 |
2006-04-04 | CVE-2006-1058 | Use of Password Hash With Insufficient Computational Effort vulnerability in multiple products BusyBox 1.1.1 does not use a salt when generating passwords, which makes it easier for local users to guess passwords from a stolen password file using techniques such as rainbow tables. | 5.5 |
2005-02-14 | CVE-2005-0408 | Use of Password Hash With Insufficient Computational Effort vulnerability in Citrusdb 0.3.6 CitrusDB 0.3.6 and earlier generates easily predictable MD5 hashes of the user name for the id_hash cookie, which allows remote attackers to bypass authentication and gain privileges by calculating the MD5 checksum of the user name combined with the "boogaadeeboo" string, which is hard-coded in the $hidden_hash variable. | 9.8 |
2002-12-31 | CVE-2002-1657 | Use of Password Hash With Insufficient Computational Effort vulnerability in Postgresql 7.3.19 PostgreSQL uses the username for a salt when generating passwords, which makes it easier for remote attackers to guess passwords via a brute force attack. | 7.5 |
2001-08-31 | CVE-2001-0967 | Use of Password Hash With Insufficient Computational Effort vulnerability in Arkeia 4.2/4.2.82 Knox Arkeia server 4.2, and possibly other versions, uses a constant salt when encrypting passwords using the crypt() function, which makes it easier for an attacker to conduct brute force password guessing. | 9.8 |