Vulnerabilities (CVE)

Filtered by vendor Bestpractical Subscribe
Filtered by product Request Tracker
Total 26 CVE
CVE Vendors Products Updated CVSS v2 CVSS v3
CVE-2015-1464 2 Bestpractical, Fedoraproject 2 Request Tracker, Fedora 2015-10-28 6.4 MEDIUM N/A
RT (aka Request Tracker) before 4.0.23 and 4.2.x before 4.2.10 allows remote attackers to hijack sessions via an RSS feed URL.
CVE-2013-3737 1 Bestpractical 1 Request Tracker 2015-02-10 5.0 MEDIUM N/A
The MobileUI (aka RT-Extension-MobileUI) extension before 1.04 in Request Tracker (RT) 4.0.0 before 4.0.13, when using the file-based session store (Apache::Session::File) and certain authentication extensions, allows remote attackers to reuse unauthorized sessions and obtain user preferences and caches via unspecified vectors.
CVE-2012-6579 1 Bestpractical 1 Request Tracker 2013-07-26 6.4 MEDIUM N/A
Best Practical Solutions RT 3.8.x before 3.8.15 and 4.0.x before 4.0.8, when GnuPG is enabled, allows remote attackers to configure encryption or signing for certain outbound e-mail, and possibly cause a denial of service (loss of e-mail readability), via an e-mail message to a queue's address.
CVE-2012-6581 1 Bestpractical 1 Request Tracker 2013-07-24 4.3 MEDIUM N/A
Best Practical Solutions RT 3.8.x before 3.8.15 and 4.0.x before 4.0.8, when GnuPG is enabled, allows remote attackers to bypass intended restrictions on reading keys in the product's keyring, and trigger outbound e-mail messages signed by an arbitrary stored secret key, by leveraging a UI e-mail signing privilege.
CVE-2012-6578 1 Bestpractical 1 Request Tracker 2013-07-24 4.3 MEDIUM N/A
Best Practical Solutions RT 3.8.x before 3.8.15 and 4.0.x before 4.0.8, when GnuPG is enabled with a "Sign by default" queue configuration, uses a queue's key for signing, which might allow remote attackers to spoof messages by leveraging the lack of authentication semantics.
CVE-2012-6580 1 Bestpractical 1 Request Tracker 2013-07-24 4.3 MEDIUM N/A
Best Practical Solutions RT 3.8.x before 3.8.15 and 4.0.x before 4.0.8, when GnuPG is enabled, does not ensure that the UI labels unencrypted messages as unencrypted, which might make it easier for remote attackers to spoof details of a message's origin or interfere with encryption-policy auditing via an e-mail message to a queue's address.