Vulnerabilities > Critical
DATE | CVE | VULNERABILITY TITLE | RISK |
---|---|---|---|
1996-01-03 | CVE-1999-1319 | Unspecified vulnerability in SGI Irix Vulnerability in object server program in SGI IRIX 5.2 through 6.1 allows remote attackers to gain root privileges in certain configurations. | 10.0 |
1995-12-12 | CVE-1999-0208 | rpc.ypupdated (NIS) allows remote users to execute arbitrary commands. | 10.0 |
1995-11-30 | CVE-1999-0080 | Unspecified vulnerability in Washington University Wu-Ftpd 2.4 Certain configurations of wu-ftp FTP server 2.4 use a _PATH_EXECPATH setting to a directory with dangerous commands, such as /bin, which allows remote authenticated users to gain root access via the "site exec" command. | 10.0 |
1995-11-01 | CVE-1999-0241 | Guessable magic cookies in X Windows allows remote attackers to execute commands, e.g. | 10.0 |
1995-10-19 | CVE-1999-0099 | Buffer overflow in syslog utility allows local or remote attackers to gain root privileges. | 10.0 |
1995-10-13 | CVE-1999-0073 | Telnet allows a remote client to specify environment variables including LD_LIBRARY_PATH, allowing an attacker to bypass the normal system libraries and gain root access. | 10.0 |
1995-08-17 | CVE-1999-0203 | Unspecified vulnerability in Eric Allman Sendmail 8.6.10 In Sendmail, attackers can gain root privileges via SMTP by specifying an improper "mail from" address and an invalid "rcpt to" address that would cause the mail to bounce to a program. | 10.0 |
1995-02-17 | CVE-1999-0235 | Unspecified vulnerability in Ncsa web Server 1.3/1.4/1.4.1 Buffer overflow in NCSA WebServer (1.4.1 and below) gives remote access. | 10.0 |
1995-02-01 | CVE-1999-0232 | Unspecified vulnerability in Ncsa Httpd Project Ncsa Httpd 1.5C Buffer overflow in NCSA WebServer (version 1.5c) gives remote access. | 10.0 |
1993-09-17 | CVE-1999-1138 | Unspecified vulnerability in SCO products SCO UNIX System V/386 Release 3.2, and other SCO products, installs the home directories (1) /tmp for the dos user, and (2) /usr/tmp for the asg user, which allows other users to gain access to those accounts since /tmp and /usr/tmp are world-writable. | 10.0 |